Does this help?  --Geoff

$ racket -l scribblings/guide/let.scrbl
GSK-1
GSK-2
  C-c C-cuser break
  context...:
   /Users/gknauth/test/plt/git/plt/pkgs/sandbox-lib/racket/sandbox.rkt:883:2: 
user-eval
   
/Users/gknauth/test/plt/git/plt/pkgs/scribble-pkgs/scribble-lib/scribble/eval.rkt:399:0:
 do-plain-eval
   
/Users/gknauth/test/plt/git/plt/pkgs/scribble-pkgs/scribble-lib/scribble/eval.rkt:261:2
   
/Users/gknauth/test/plt/git/plt/pkgs/scribble-pkgs/scribble-lib/scribble/eval.rkt:550:0:
 do-titled-interaction
   
/Users/gknauth/test/plt/git/plt/pkgs/racket-pkgs/racket-doc/scribblings/guide/let.scrbl:
 [running body]

-----

@(printf "GSK-2\n")
@examples[
(let* ([x (list "Borroughs")]
       [y (cons "Rice" x)]
       [z (cons "Edgar" y)])
  (list x y z))
(let* ([name (list "Borroughs")]
       [name (cons "Rice" name)]
       [name (cons "Edgar" name)])
  name)
]

On May 4, 2014, at 18:30 , Robby Findler <ro...@eecs.northwestern.edu> wrote:

> The stack traces suggest it is in that one file. So if you open it up
> and put a printf right before each example and then see when the
> printfs stop, that'll probably tell us something good. You'd want to
> look for each place where there is an example (compare the
> documentation itself to the source) and then put something like
> 
> @(printf "1\n")
> 
> right before each of them. Or maybe do binary search. :)


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