>If a typing error is made in a station equate statement, no error is
raised.
> Presumably Bruce's problem is solved simply by better visibility of the
> existing warning,.?
Yep, looks like 5.3.12 has solved this problem, some obscure loop closures
need some scrutiny on my part (or are those yo
I had the same problem as Bruce several times: an error in the name of
an equate was unnoticed and it took me a long time before I noticed it.
In parallel, I used a lot the the "equate to undefined" feature to
compile small subsections of a large survey and I find it very useful.
However, for t
+++ Olly Betts [2013-12-01 23:02 +]:
> But in your original example, you're linking to a non-existent station
> in a different survey (if I follow the therion syntax correctly), and
> the equivalent situation gets a warning from Survex:
>
> badequate.svx:1: warning: Station "kb.kb51_29" referr
On Sun, Dec 01, 2013 at 07:52:32AM +1300, Bruce wrote:
> My inference from warnings I get on other occasions is that Survex reports
> fixed stations that are not connected to any survey leg. I have many of
> these in other files - gps locations of surface features for example.
Yes, Survex will wa
ate to non-existant station does not raise error
Does the log file contain a warning? I thought that it was using Survex
under the hood, and that warns of stations referred to but not used in any
fix or leg.
On 29 Nov 2013 20:07, "Bruce" wrote:
This may have been raised before.
If a typin
That should have said 'not used in any fix or leg'
On 30 Nov 2013 09:53, "Footleg" wrote:
> Does the log file contain a warning? I thought that it was using Survex
> under the hood, and that warns of stations referred to but not used in and
> fix or leg.
> On 29 Nov 2013 20:07, "Bruce" wrote:
>
Does the log file contain a warning? I thought that it was using Survex
under the hood, and that warns of stations referred to but not used in and
fix or leg.
On 29 Nov 2013 20:07, "Bruce" wrote:
> This may have been raised before.
>
>
>
> If a typing error is made in a station equate statement,
This may have been raised before.
If a typing error is made in a station equate statement, no error is raised.
For example in the following station kb51.29 at kb does not exist, therefore
the loop is not closed as the user intended.
equate kb51.29 at kb kb51.29 at 57
Can an error be ra