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Here is a list of the more important error symbols in standard Emacs, grouped by concept. The list includes each symbol’s message and a cross reference to a description of how the error can occur.
Each error symbol has an set of parent error conditions that is a
list of symbols. Normally this list includes the error symbol itself
and the symbol error. Occasionally it includes additional
symbols, which are intermediate classifications, narrower than
error but broader than a single error symbol. For example, all
the errors in accessing files have the condition file-error. If
we do not say here that a certain error symbol has additional error
conditions, that means it has none.
As a special exception, the error symbol quit does not have the
condition error, because quitting is not considered an error.
Most of these error symbols are defined in C (mainly data.c),
but some are defined in Lisp. For example, the file userlock.el
defines the file-locked and file-supersession errors.
Several of the specialized Lisp libraries distributed with Emacs
define their own error symbols. We do not attempt to list of all
those here.
See Errors, for an explanation of how errors are generated and handled.
errorThe message is ‘error’. See Errors.
quitThe message is ‘Quit’. See Quitting.
args-out-of-rangeThe message is ‘Args out of range’. This happens when trying to access an element beyond the range of a sequence, buffer, or other container-like object. See Sequences Arrays Vectors, and See Text.
arith-errorThe message is ‘Arithmetic error’. This occurs when trying to perform integer division by zero. See Numeric Conversions, and See Arithmetic Operations.
beginning-of-bufferThe message is ‘Beginning of buffer’. See Character Motion.
buffer-read-onlyThe message is ‘Buffer is read-only’. See Read Only Buffers.
circular-listThe message is ‘List contains a loop’. This happens when a circular structure is encountered. See Circular Objects.
cl-assertion-failedThe message is ‘Assertion failed’. This happens when the
cl-assert macro fails a test. See Assertions in Common Lisp
Extensions.
coding-system-errorThe message is ‘Invalid coding system’. See Lisp and Coding Systems.
cyclic-function-indirectionThe message is ‘Symbol's chain of function indirections contains a loop’. See Function Indirection.
cyclic-variable-indirectionThe message is ‘Symbol's chain of variable indirections contains a loop’. See Variable Aliases.
dbus-errorThe message is ‘D-Bus error’. This is only defined if Emacs was compiled with D-Bus support. See Errors and Events in D-Bus integration in Emacs.
end-of-bufferThe message is ‘End of buffer’. See Character Motion.
end-of-fileThe message is ‘End of file during parsing’. Note that this is
not a subcategory of file-error, because it pertains to the
Lisp reader, not to file I/O. See Input Functions.
file-already-existsThis is a subcategory of file-error. See Writing to Files.
file-date-errorThis is a subcategory of file-error. It occurs when
copy-file tries and fails to set the last-modification time of
the output file. See Changing Files.
file-errorWe do not list the error-strings of this error and its subcategories,
because the error message is normally constructed from the data items
alone when the error condition file-error is present. Thus,
the error-strings are not very relevant. However, these error symbols
do have error-message properties, and if no data is provided,
the error-message property is used. See Files.
compression-errorThis is a subcategory of file-error, which results from
problems handling a compressed file. See How Programs Do Loading.
file-lockedThis is a subcategory of file-error. See File Locks.
file-supersessionThis is a subcategory of file-error. See Modification Time.
file-notify-errorThis is a subcategory of file-error. It happens, when a file
could not be watched for changes. See File Notifications.
ftp-errorThis is a subcategory of file-error, which results from
problems in accessing a remote file using ftp. See Remote Files in The GNU Emacs Manual.
invalid-functionThe message is ‘Invalid function’. See Function Indirection.
invalid-read-syntaxThe message is ‘Invalid read syntax’. See Printed Representation.
invalid-regexpThe message is ‘Invalid regexp’. See Regular Expressions.
mark-inactiveThe message is ‘The mark is not active now’. See The Mark.
no-catchThe message is ‘No catch for tag’. See Catch and Throw.
scan-errorThe message is ‘Scan error’. This happens when certain syntax-parsing functions find invalid syntax or mismatched parentheses. See List Motion, and See Parsing Expressions.
search-failedThe message is ‘Search failed’. See Searching and Matching.
setting-constantThe message is ‘Attempt to set a constant symbol’. This happens
when attempting to assign values to nil, t, and keyword
symbols. See Constant Variables.
text-read-onlyThe message is ‘Text is read-only’. This is a subcategory of
buffer-read-only. See Special Properties.
undefined-colorThe message is ‘Undefined color’. See Color Names.
user-errorThe message is the empty string. See Signaling Errors.
void-functionThe message is ‘Symbol's function definition is void’. See Function Cells.
void-variableThe message is ‘Symbol's value as variable is void’. See Accessing Variables.
wrong-number-of-argumentsThe message is ‘Wrong number of arguments’. See Classifying Lists.
wrong-type-argumentThe message is ‘Wrong type argument’. See Type Predicates.
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