\blah and so onproduces the error report
! Undefined control sequence.
l.4 \blah
and so on
while:
\newcommand{\blah}[1]{\bleah #1}
\blah{to you}, folks
produces the error report
! Undefined control sequence.
\blah #1->\bleah
#1
l.5 \blah{to you}
, folks
If the argument itself is in error, we will see things such as
\newcommand{\blah}[1]{#1 to you}
\blah{\bleah}, folks
producing
! Undefined control sequence.
<argument> \bleah
l.5 \blah{\bleah}
, folks
The prompt accepts single-character commands: the list of what’s
available may be had by typing ?. One immediately valuable
command is h, which gives you an expansion of TeXs original
précis message, sometimes accompanied by a hint on what to do to
work round the problem in the short term. If you simply type ‘return’
(or whatever else your system uses to signal the end of a line) at the
prompt, TeX will attempt to carry on (often with rather little
success).
Go to previous question, or next question
Go to FAQ home.
URL for this question: http://www.tex.ac.uk/cgi-bin/texfaq2html?label=errstruct
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This is FAQ version 3.27, released on 2013-06-07.