xtwarningmsg(3) [hpux man page]
XtWarningMsg() XtWarningMsg() Name XtWarningMsg - call the high-level warning handler. Synopsis void XtWarningMsg(name, type, class, default, params, num_params) String name; String type; String class; String default; String *params; Cardinal *num_params; Inputs name Specifies the general kind of error. type Specifies the detailed name of the error. class Specifies the resource class of the error. default Specifies the default message to use if no message is found in the database. params Specifies an array of values to be inserted into the message. num_params Specifies the number of elements in params. Availability XtWarningMsg() has been superseded by XtAppWarningMsg(). Description XtWarningMsg() passes all of its arguments to the installed high-level warning handler. The default high-level warning handler is _XtDe- faultWarningMsg(). It calls XtAppGetErrorDatabaseText() to lookup an error message of the specified name, type, and class in the error database. If no such message is found, XtAppGetErrorDatabaseText() returns the specified default message. In either case, _XtDefaultWarn- ingMsg() does a printf-style substitution of params into the message, and passes the resulting text to the low-level warning handler by calling XtWarning(). Usage XtWarningMsg() has been superseded by XtAppWarningMsg(), which performs the same function on a per-application context basis. XtWarn- ingMsg() now calls XtAppWarningMsg() passing the default application context created by XtInitialize(). Very few programs need multiple application contexts, and you can continue to use XtWarningMsg() if you initialize your application with XtInitialize(). We recommend, however, that you use XtAppInitialize(), XtAppWarningMsg(), and the other XtApp*() application context specific functions. See XtAppWarningMsg() for more information. See Also XtAppErrorMsg(1), XtAppWarningMsg(1). Xt - Error Handling XtWarningMsg()
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XtErrorMsg() XtErrorMsg() Name XtErrorMsg - call the high-level fatal error handler. Synopsis void XtErrorMsg(name, type, class, default, params, num_params) String name; String type; String class; String default; String *params; Cardinal *num_params; Inputs name Specifies the general kind of error. type Specifies the detailed name of the error. class Specifies the resource class of the error. default Specifies the default message to use if no message is found in the database. params Specifies an array of values to be inserted into the message. num_params Specifies the number of elements in params. Returns XtErrorMsg() terminates the application and does not return. Availability XtErrorMsg() has been superseded by XtAppErrorMsg(). Description XtErrorMsg() passes all of its arguments to the installed high-level error handler. The default high-level error handler is _XtDefaultEr- rorMsg(). It calls XtAppGetErrorDatabaseText() to lookup an error message of the specified name, type, and class in the error database. If no such message is found, XtAppGetErrorDatabaseText() returns the specified default message. In either case, _XtDefaultErrorMsg() does a printf-style substitution of params into the message, and passes the resulting text to the low-level error handler by calling XtError(). Usage XtErrorMsg() has been superseded by XtAppErrorMsg(), which performs the same function on a per-application context basis. XtErrorMsg() now calls XtAppErrorMsg() passing the default application context created by XtInitialize(). Very few programs need multiple application con- texts, and you can continue to use XtErrorMsg() if you initialize your application with XtInitialize(). We recommend, however, that you use XtAppInitialize(), XtAppErrorMsg(), and the other XtApp*() application context specific functions. See XtAppErrorMsg() for more information. See Also XtAppErrorMsg(1), XtAppWarningMsg(1). Xt - Error Handling XtErrorMsg()