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1 281 jeremybenn
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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--                                                                          --
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--                         GNAT COMPILER COMPONENTS                         --
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--                                                                          --
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--                              B I N D E R R                               --
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--                                                                          --
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--                                 S p e c                                  --
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--                                                                          --
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--          Copyright (C) 1992-2009, Free Software Foundation, Inc.         --
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--                                                                          --
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-- GNAT is free software;  you can  redistribute it  and/or modify it under --
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-- terms of the  GNU General Public License as published  by the Free Soft- --
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-- ware  Foundation;  either version 3,  or (at your option) any later ver- --
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-- sion.  GNAT is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITH- --
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-- OUT ANY WARRANTY;  without even the  implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY --
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-- or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the GNU General Public License --
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-- for  more details.  You should have  received  a copy of the GNU General --
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-- Public License  distributed with GNAT; see file COPYING3.  If not, go to --
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-- http://www.gnu.org/licenses for a complete copy of the license.          --
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--                                                                          --
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-- GNAT was originally developed  by the GNAT team at  New York University. --
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-- Extensive contributions were provided by Ada Core Technologies Inc.      --
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--                                                                          --
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------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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--  This package contains the routines to output error messages for the binder
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--  and also the routines for handling fatal error conditions in the binder.
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with Namet; use Namet;
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with Types; use Types;
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package Binderr is
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   Errors_Detected : Int;
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   --  Number of errors detected so far
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   Warnings_Detected : Int;
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   --  Number of warnings detected
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   Info_Prefix_Suppress : Boolean := False;
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   --  If set to True, the normal "info: " header before messages generated
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   --  by Error_Msg_Info will be omitted.
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   ---------------------------------------------------------
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   -- Error Message Text and Message Insertion Characters --
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   ---------------------------------------------------------
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   --  Error message text strings are composed of letters, digits and the
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   --  special characters space, comma, period, colon and semicolon,
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   --  apostrophe and parentheses. Special insertion characters can also
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   --  appear which cause the error message circuit to modify the given
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   --  string as follows:
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   --    Insertion character { (Left brace: insert file name from Names table)
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   --      The character { is replaced by the text for the file name specified
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   --      by the File_Name_Type value stored in Error_Msg_File_1. The name is
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   --      always enclosed in quotes. A second { may appear in a single message
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   --      in which case it is similarly replaced by the name which is
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   --      specified by the File_Name_Type value stored in Error_Msg_File_2.
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   --    Insertion character $ (Dollar: insert unit name from Names table)
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   --      The character & is replaced by the text for the unit name specified
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   --      by the Name_Id value stored in Error_Msg_Unit_1. The name is always
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   --      enclosed in quotes. A second $ may appear in a single message in
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   --      which case it is similarly replaced by the name which is specified
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   --      by the Name_Id value stored in Error_Msg_Unit_2.
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   --    Insertion character # (Pound: insert non-negative number in decimal)
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   --      The character # is replaced by the contents of Error_Msg_Nat_1
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   --      converted into an unsigned decimal string. A second # may appear
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   --      in a single message, in which case it is similarly replaced by
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   --      the value stored in Error_Msg_Nat_2.
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   --    Insertion character ? (Question mark: warning message)
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   --      The character ?, which must be the first character in the message
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   --      string, signals a warning message instead of an error message.
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   -----------------------------------------------------
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   -- Global Values Used for Error Message Insertions --
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   -----------------------------------------------------
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   --  The following global variables are essentially additional parameters
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   --  passed to the error message routine for insertion sequences described
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   --  above. The reason these are passed globally is that the insertion
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   --  mechanism is essentially an untyped one in which the appropriate
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   --  variables are set depending on the specific insertion characters used.
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   Error_Msg_Name_1 : Name_Id;
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   --  Name_Id value for % insertion characters in message
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   Error_Msg_File_1 : File_Name_Type;
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   Error_Msg_File_2 : File_Name_Type;
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   --  Name_Id values for { insertion characters in message
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   Error_Msg_Unit_1 : Unit_Name_Type;
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   Error_Msg_Unit_2 : Unit_Name_Type;
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   --  Name_Id values for $ insertion characters in message
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   Error_Msg_Nat_1 : Nat;
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   Error_Msg_Nat_2 : Nat;
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   --  Integer values for # insertion characters in message
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   ------------------------------
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   -- Error Output Subprograms --
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   ------------------------------
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   procedure Error_Msg (Msg : String);
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   --  Output specified error message to standard error or standard output
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   --  as governed by the brief and verbose switches, and update error
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   --  counts appropriately
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   procedure Error_Msg_Info (Msg : String);
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   --  Output information line. Indentical in effect to Error_Msg, except
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   --  that the prefix is info: instead of error: and the error count is
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   --  not incremented. The prefix may be suppressed by setting the global
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   --  variable Info_Prefix_Suppress to True.
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   procedure Error_Msg_Output (Msg : String; Info : Boolean);
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   --  Output given message, with insertions, to current message output file.
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   --  The second argument is True for an info message, false for a normal
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   --  warning or error message. Normally this is not called directly, but
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   --  rather only by Error_Msg or Error_Msg_Info. It is called directly
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   --  when the caller must control whether the output goes to stderr or
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   --  stdout (Error_Msg_Output always goes to the current output file).
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   procedure Finalize_Binderr;
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   --  Finalize error output for one file
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   procedure Initialize_Binderr;
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   --  Initialize error output for one file
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end Binderr;

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