From 32c3bd8e78e63a9d3ab61848f9f3d5ef854c0d1f Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Yoichi Hirai Date: Wed, 12 Oct 2016 09:38:09 +0200 Subject: Change phrasing around too small index --- docs/control-structures.rst | 4 ++-- 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) (limited to 'docs') diff --git a/docs/control-structures.rst b/docs/control-structures.rst index 6b66e55b..820fb280 100644 --- a/docs/control-structures.rst +++ b/docs/control-structures.rst @@ -324,8 +324,8 @@ In the following example, we show how ``throw`` can be used to easily revert an Currently, there are six situations, where exceptions happen automatically in Solidity: -1. If you access an array on or beyond its length (i.e. ``x[i]`` where ``i >= x.length``) or below zero. -2. If you access a fixed-length bytes on or beyond its length, or below zero. +1. If you access an array on a too large or negative index (i.e. ``x[i]`` where ``i >= x.length`` or ``i < 0``). +2. If you access a fixed-length bytes on a too large or negative index. 3. If a function called via a message call does not finish properly (i.e. it runs out of gas, has no matching function, or throws an exception itself), except when a low level operation ``call``, ``send``, ``delegatecall`` or ``callcode`` is used. 4. If a non-existent function on a library is called or Ether is sent to a library. 5. If you divide or modulo by zero (e.g. ``5 / 0`` or ``23 % 0``). -- cgit v1.2.3