h too.
-- Hwee-Boon
On Wed, Oct 1, 2008 at 7:11 PM, Philippe Marschall philippe.marschall@gmail.com wrote:
2008/10/1 David Röthlisberger squeak@webcitas.ch:
Even without that, though, I don't think there's a real issue here. If you're inside canvas code and want a breakpoint, use some other receiver - the comment in the #break method itself uses "nil break" as an example.
The original issue was that OB uses a flag icon to call attention to senders of #halt and #break. In rendering methods, that's a false alarm.
It seems like #break is only used by the tools, so it would better to change that than Seaside.
Or just change the detection code to check if the receiver of #break is a variable or argument called html or renderer.
yes, I also wanted to go for that. In that case you confirm that almost all Seaside applications either use 'html' or 'renderer' as a name for the receiver of #break?
or simply r, yes.
Cheers Philippe