On 12-03-22 03:57 PM, Daevid Vincent wrote:
Resending since I didn't get a single reply. Maybe it got lost?
-Original Message-
Sent: Tuesday, March 13, 2012 5:58 PM
I am implementing a custom error handler and started noticing some bizarre
behavior. Every Nth time I refresh the page, I
Is there any way to use a class to handle errors? I've tried some stuff like
set_error_handler(Error_Handler::logError and such, but with no luck.
It accepts a callback type, which is a pseudo type. Basically an array
containg the object and the method to use. Eg.
$obj = new
I beleive you can also do
set_error_handler(array('classname', 'myMethod'));
for static methods.
- Craige
On Fri, May 2, 2008 at 2:26 PM, Richard Heyes [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Is there any way to use a class to handle errors? I've tried some stuff
like
On Fri, May 5, 2006 6:20 am, icy wrote:
chris smith wrote:
What does your code look like?
I just realized that when called a second time, set_error_handler()
returns my custom error handler but it is never triggered.
Code looks like this:
?php
if
On Fri, May 5, 2006 8:08 am, Martin Alterisio \El Hombre Gris\ wrote:
And set_error_handler() returns NULL because there isn't a previously
defined error handler, not because it failed.
Since it's documented to return NULL when it fails to set the error
handler, one would hope it does NOT
Richard Lynch wrote:
It's possible that you have mistaken whatever set_error_handler
returns for no previous error handler for NULL...
Are you using === NULL or is_null() to test?
If not, I suspect it's really returning FALSE or '' and what you think
is an error condition is, in fact, not an
On 5/5/06, icy [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Richard Lynch wrote:
It's possible that you have mistaken whatever set_error_handler
returns for no previous error handler for NULL...
Are you using === NULL or is_null() to test?
If not, I suspect it's really returning FALSE or '' and what you think
chris smith wrote:
What does your code look like?
I just realized that when called a second time, set_error_handler()
returns my custom error handler but it is never triggered.
Code looks like this:
?php
if (set_error_handler('core_error_handler', E_ALL) === NULL)
icy escribió:
chris smith wrote:
What does your code look like?
I just realized that when called a second time, set_error_handler()
returns my custom error handler but it is never triggered.
Code looks like this:
?php
if (set_error_handler('core_error_handler', E_ALL) === NULL)
On Thu, May 4, 2006 4:19 pm, icy wrote:
I use set_error_handler() in my script but it fails and returns NULL
indicating an error has happened.
But there are no entries in error.log ore something similar.
How can I find out what actually went wrong?
It's possible that you have mistaken
On Mon, 2003-06-23 at 15:12, Jeff Stewart wrote:
I'm using PHP 4.3.1 as an Apache module. No matter what I try, I can't get
set_error_handler() to do anything other than return false. Under what
circumstances does this happen?
?php
function doobee($errno, $errstr, $errfile, $errline,
hi guys how is ti possible to do a set_error_handler within a class so
it
will trigger the callback function and so will be able to return the
line
and file in the message ?
You'd set it just like you would anywhere else in your code.
If you want the callback function to be a method in your
, January 29, 2003 4:51 AM
To: 'electroteque'; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [PHP] set_error_handler inside a class
hi guys how is ti possible to do a set_error_handler within a class so
it
will trigger the callback function and so will be able to return the
line
and file in the message
sorry is there a way to do this in php3 ? my work currently only has php3
,
where i am upgrading it for them soon, this is a bummer, i soughta wanna
catch errors and show the line and file in the error too
Nope... it's 4.0.1 and higher only. UPGRADE!! :)
---John Holmes...
--
PHP General
At 06:34 10.11.2002, Monty said:
[snip]
When I use set_error_handler('error_function') in my scripts, errors are
constantly being triggered that I've never seen before. If I comment the
handler function out, the errors go away. I have the error reporting set
)
Newsgroups: php.general
Date: Sun, 10 Nov 2002 10:42:05 +0100
To: Monty [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [PHP] set_error_handler() Keeps Triggering Errors
At 06:34 10.11.2002, Monty said:
[snip]
When I use set_error_handler('error_function
On Sun, 10 Nov 2002 10:48:46 -0500, you wrote:
Hi Earnest. I found these user notes in the PHP manual, but, it's confusing
and seems to be a bit contradictory:
It's simple: A user defined error handler cannot handle parse errors
or compile time errors. That makes sense to me...if your script
At 04:36 PM 2/9/2002 -0800, Charlie Killian wrote:
But others like not including a semicolon returns nothing:
$d = 3
The page is not returned there is no error and the page is stopped being
parsed.
This is by design. Quoting from http://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=9386:
quote
[17 Jun 2001 4:56am]
Thanks Mike. I updated display_errors = On and now I see the errors.
Charlie
Sounds like you have your php.ini configured to not display errors, since
you are not seeing the parse error message in your HTML output...
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Eek. Nevermind.
The problem, for anyone who is interested, is that you cannot specify that
any parameters in the error-handler function to be passed by reference.
Dean.
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""Boget, Chris"" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Can you use the above function to set the error
handler to a custom class? If so, how? I've been
having no luck no matter what I do...
Chris
Chris.
I tried doing something like:
set_error_handler("Error::handleError");
myself, and to no avail.
""Boget, Chris"" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Can you use the above function to set the error
handler to a custom class? If so, how? I've been
having no luck no matter what I do...
I tried doing something like:
set_error_handler("Error::handleError");
myself, and to no avail. It seems
If I'm not mistaken set_error_handler() takes a string that is the name of
a function, I am sure in that function you can instantiate whatever class
you want.
morgan
At 03:57 PM 4/16/2001, Boget, Chris wrote:
Can you use the above function to set the error
handler to a custom class? If so,
If I'm not mistaken set_error_handler() takes a string that
is the name of a function, I am sure in that function you can
instantiate whatever class you want.
I thought about that. But ideally, what I'm trying to do is
trap the errors with a class method (after instantiating)
then print
If I'm not mistaken set_error_handler() takes a string that
is the name of a function, I am sure in that function you
can instantiate whatever class you want.
After thinking about it some more, I'm doing this. Not sure
if this is the best way to go about it, but it allows me to do
what I
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