Difference between revisions of "Warnings"
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<footer>INF, NAN, and NULL - Exception values / {{PAGENAME}} / Datatype functions</footer> | <footer>INF, NAN, and NULL - Exception values / {{PAGENAME}} / Datatype functions</footer> |
Latest revision as of 21:25, 7 July 2021
Warnings can occur during evaluation, for example when trying to take the square root of a negative number, for example:
This Warning dialog gives you the option to ignore this and future warnings. If you select Ignore Warnings, Y yields:
Y → [NAN, NAN, 0, 1, 1.414]
The NaN values can be propagated further into a model.
Analytica displays warning conditions detected while evaluating an expression only if the resulting value assigned to a variable contains an explicit error. In the following example, the NAN
resulting from evaluating Sqrt(X) for negative X
does not appear in the result, so it does not display a warning:
Because (X < 0
) evaluates to an array containing both True
(1) and False
(0) values, the expression evaluates Sqrt(X)
, and generates NAN
as for Y
above. But, the conditional means that resulting value for Z
contains no NAN
s, and so Analytica generates no warning when Z
is evaluated.
You can also make use of the return value, even if it might be errant, as in the following example:
The common warning “subscript or slice value out of range” returns Null
, for example:
Index I := 1..5
X[I = 6] → Null
If you want to ignore warnings for a single variable, you can use the IgnoreWarnings() function around the definition.
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