Previous: Global Break Condition, Up: Breaks
All breakpoints in a definition are forgotten each time you
reinstrument it. If you wish to make a breakpoint that won't be
forgotten, you can write a source breakpoint, which is simply a
call to the function edebug
in your source code. You can, of
course, make such a call conditional. For example, in the fac
function, you can insert the first line as shown below, to stop when the
argument reaches zero:
(defun fac (n) (if (= n 0) (edebug)) (if (< 0 n) (* n (fac (1- n))) 1))
When the fac
definition is instrumented and the function is
called, the call to edebug
acts as a breakpoint. Depending on
the execution mode, Edebug stops or pauses there.
If no instrumented code is being executed when edebug
is called,
that function calls debug
.