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BitLogger/docs/api/logger-error.md
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2026-05-12 16:06:00 +08:00

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name, group, category, update-time, description, key-word
name group category update-time description key-word
logger-error api logging 20260512 Emit an error-level record through the logger using the highest built-in severity shortcut.
logger
error
sync
public

Logger-error

Emit an error-level record through the synchronous logger. This is the convenience wrapper for log(Level::Error, ...).

Interface

pub fn[S : Sink] Logger::error(self : Logger[S], message : String, fields~ : Array[Field] = []) -> Unit {}

input

  • self : Logger[S] - Logger that should emit the error record.
  • message : String - Error message text.
  • fields : Array[Field] - Optional structured fields attached to the record.

output

  • Unit - No return value. The record is handled according to the logger threshold and sink pipeline.

Explanation

Detailed rules explaining key parameters and behaviors

  • This helper delegates to log(Level::Error, ...).
  • Error is the highest built-in severity in this sync logger API.
  • Per-call target override is not exposed here; use log(...) when explicit target control is required.
  • Sink composition, filtering, patching, and queue wrappers still apply normally.

How to Use

Here are some specific examples provided.

When Report A Failing Operation

When an operation should emit a high-severity failure event:

logger.error("worker execution failed")

In this example, the call site clearly communicates failure severity.

When Attach Structured Error Context

When an error event should include diagnostic fields:

logger.error("dispatch failed", fields=[field("job_id", "42")])

In this example, the record carries machine-readable context without dropping to the generic log(...) form.

Error Case

e.g.:

  • If the logger minimum level is above Error, the call still returns without writing, though this configuration is unusual.

  • If a target override is required, use log(...) instead of this severity shortcut.

Notes

  1. Use this helper for high-severity application failures.

  2. Emitting an error record is separate from throwing or handling program exceptions.