-;;; COERCE-TO-CONDITION is used in SIGNAL, ERROR, CERROR, WARN, and
-;;; INVOKE-DEBUGGER for parsing the hairy argument conventions into a single
-;;; argument that's directly usable by all the other routines.
-(defun coerce-to-condition (datum arguments default-type function-name)
- (cond ((typep datum 'condition)
- (if arguments
- (cerror "Ignore the additional arguments."
- 'simple-type-error
- :datum arguments
- :expected-type 'null
- :format-control "You may not supply additional arguments ~
- when giving ~S to ~S."
- :format-arguments (list datum function-name)))
- datum)
- ((symbolp datum) ; roughly, (SUBTYPEP DATUM 'CONDITION)
- (apply #'make-condition datum arguments))
- ((or (stringp datum) (functionp datum))
- (make-condition default-type
- :format-control datum
- :format-arguments arguments))
- (t
- (error 'simple-type-error
- :datum datum
- :expected-type '(or symbol string)
- :format-control "bad argument to ~S: ~S"
- :format-arguments (list function-name datum)))))
+;;; a shared idiom in ERROR, CERROR, and BREAK: The user probably
+;;; doesn't want to hear that the error "occurred in" one of these
+;;; functions, so we try to point the top of the stack to our caller
+;;; instead.
+(eval-when (:compile-toplevel :execute)
+ (defmacro-mundanely maybe-find-stack-top-hint ()
+ `(or sb!debug:*stack-top-hint*
+ (nth-value 1 (find-caller-name-and-frame)))))