#Warn

Enables or disables warnings for specific conditions which may indicate an error, such as a typo or missing "global" declaration.

#Warn WarningType, WarningMode

Parameters

WarningType

The type of warning to enable or disable. If omitted, it defaults to All.

UseUnsetLocal or UseUnsetGlobal: Warn when a variable is read without having previously been assigned a value or initialized with VarSetCapacity. If the variable is intended to be empty, assign an empty string to suppress this warning.

This is split into separate warning types for locals and globals because it is more common to use a global variable without prior initialization, due to their persistent and script-wide nature. For this reason, some script authors may wish to enable this type of warning for locals but disable it for globals.

#Warn
;y := ""  ; This would suppress the warning.
x := y    ; y hasn't been assigned a value.

LocalSameAsGlobal: Before the script starts to run, display a warning for each undeclared local variable which has the same name as a global variable. This is intended to prevent errors caused by forgetting to declare a global variable inside a function before attempting to access it. If the variable really was intended to be local, a declaration such as local x or static y can be used to suppress the warning.

#Warn
g := 1
ShowG() {       ; The warning is displayed even if the function is never called.
    ;global g   ; <-- This is required to access the global variable.
    MsgBox g  ; Without the declaration, "g" is an empty local variable.
}

All: Apply the given WarningMode to all supported warning types.

WarningMode

A value indicating how warnings should be delivered. If omitted, it defaults to MsgBox.

MsgBox: Show a message box describing the warning. Note that once the message box is dismissed, the script will continue as usual.

StdOut: Send a description of the warning to stdout (the program's standard output stream), along with the filename and line number. This allows fancy editors such as SciTE to capture warnings without disrupting the script - the user can later jump to each offending line via the editor's output pane.

OutputDebug: Send a description of the warning to the debugger for display. If a debugger is not active, this will have no effect. For more details, see OutputDebug.

Off: Disable warnings of the given WarningType.

Remarks

By default, all warnings are off.

Warnings can't be enabled or disabled at run-time; the settings are determined when a script loads. Therefore, the location in the script is not significant (and, like other # directives, #Warn cannot be executed conditionally).

However, the ordering of multiple #Warn directives is significant: the last occurrence that sets a given warning determines the mode for that warning. So, for example, the two statements below have the combined effect of enabling all warnings except UseUnsetGlobal:

#Warn All
#Warn UseUnsetGlobal, Off

Related

Local and Global Variables

Example

#Warn All, Off                    ; Disable all warnings.  This is the default state.
#Warn                             ; Enable every type of warning; show each warning in a message box.
#Warn UseUnsetLocal, OutputDebug  ; Warn when a local variable is used before it's set; send warning to OutputDebug.