I don't think it satisfactory to assume users will have set php.ini to  
the appropriate value.

Many people are on shared hosting and will be unable to change this  
value.

We should accommodate this and make it easy to display errors and  
adjust the level.

On Nov 26, 2008, at 2:33 PM, Eugene Wee wrote:

> Hi,
>
> On Thu, Nov 27, 2008 at 3:21 AM, rick c <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Assume error reporting is set high, though, and error display is
> turned off. What happens if there is a NOTICE or STRICT error. Does
> the page just die without output,at the place where the error
> occurred, or is the error ignored while the script goes it's merry
> way? I really don't know.
>
> According to the PHP manual published on 16 May 2008, both E_NOTICE  
> and E_STRICT generate run-time notices (and thus they are non- 
> fatal), hence in your scenario the errors will be ignored while the  
> script goes its merry way. However, the most recent edition of the  
> PHP manual merely says that E_STRICT will "enable to have PHP  
> suggest changes to your code which will ensure the best  
> interoperability and forward compatibility of your code", so I am  
> not certain if fatal errors could be generated by E_STRICT.
>
> For reference:
> http://www.php.net/manual/en/errorfunc.constants.php
>
> Regards,
> Eugene
>
>
> >


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