Also, you get the output my_var because if you say echo my_var PHP
looks for a constant my_var and if it doesn't find one it just assumes
you want the name of the constant.Look in the manual page for
constants for more details about how they work
http://php.net/manual/en/language.constants.php
On
Hi, I'm coming from ASP background.
There, there is a life saver option called option explicit. It
forces you to declare your variables using the dim statement. The
good thing about that is that if you were to mis-spell one of your
variables, asp.dll throws an error stating that on line so and so,
On Wed, Jan 11, 2012 at 8:43 PM, Haluk Karamete halukkaram...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi, I'm coming from ASP background.
There, there is a life saver option called option explicit. It
forces you to declare your variables using the dim statement. The
good thing about that is that if you were to
Thanks...
Well I just changed the ?php error_reporting (E_ALL ^ E_NOTICE); ?
to ?php error_reporting (E_ALL ); ? and that does it for me.
Notice: Use of undefined constant my_age - assumed 'my_age' in
D:\Hosting\5291100\html\blueprint\bp_library.php on line 40
my_age
Now back in business :)
Haluk Karamete halukkaram...@gmail.com hat am 12. Januar 2012 um 06:17
geschrieben:
Thanks...
Well I just changed the ?php error_reporting (E_ALL ^ E_NOTICE); ?
to ?php error_reporting (E_ALL ); ? and that does it for me.
Notice: Use of undefined constant my_age - assumed 'my_age' in
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