On Wed, Feb 27, 2008 at 1:56 PM, Richard S. Crawford
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> For my own amusement, I'm writing a function that will print out detailed
> error messages for an API that I'm creating for a minor project. One of the
> pieces of information I'd like to return would be the name of the function
> that called the error function.
[snip!]
> I know that I could pass the name of the function as a parameter to the
> error() function (e.g. error("bad_function","This is dumb")) but I'd rather
> keep it simpler than that.
>
> Is there a way to do this?
Not without a lower-level stack trace utility like xdebug, as far
as I know. However, you can slightly modify your code to do this:
<?php
function error ($func,$message) {
print "The error message is $message";
print "The function that called the error was: ".$func."\n";
}
function bad_function($param) {
error (__FUNCTION__,"This is dumb");
return false;
}
bad_function("blah");
?>
I also placed that online in my code library (to which I always
forget to link, but have dozens of examples), along with a function to
list all of the user-level functions available to the current script.
[Demo] http://www.pilotpig.net/code-library/function-info.php
[Source]
http://www.pilotpig.net/code-library/source.php?f=function-info.php
--
</Dan>
Daniel P. Brown
Senior Unix Geek
<? while(1) { $me = $mind--; sleep(86400); } ?>
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