All breakpoints in a definition are forgotten each time you
reinstrument it. 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, 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.
Go to the first, previous, next, last section, table of contents.