On Mon, 2007-04-23 at 15:56 -0400, Justin Frim wrote:
> Edward Vermillion wrote:
> 
> >
> > On Apr 21, 2007, at 6:35 PM, Justin Frim wrote:
> >
> >> I've always gone by the rule that if you're making software that  
> >> other people will see or use, make it clean.
> >> Sometimes I'll "cheat" and stick a @ symbol in front of a line to  
> >> shut up errors and warnings for that particular line, but usually I  
> >> only do that for speed optimization.  (ie. if it's in a short loop  
> >> that cycles many times).
> >
> >
> > Your not saving any cycles. The error handler still gets called, the  
> > error just doesn't get shown.
> >
> > And '@' is just another way of ignoring an error in your program. Not  
> > really a good idea if you want to right good code.
> >
> > Ed
> 
> Surely that's faster than calling isset(), declaring another variable, 
> and executing another if() statement though, no?

It's probably faster if no notice is generated. It's almost certainly
slower if a notice *is* generated. It's definitely bad practice and a
lazy way to hide poor implementation.

Cheers,
Rob.
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