On Wed, Mar 31, 2010 at 9:08 AM, Andrew Ballard <aball...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Nope. All it does is suppress the error message. Just try it:
>
> <?php
>
> @mysql_connect('localhost', 'baduser', 'badpassword') or die('Could
> not connect');
>
> ?>
>
> Output:
> Could not connect
> <?php
>
> @mysql_connect('localhost', 'baduser', 'badpassword') or die('Could
> not connect');
>
> ?>
>
> Output:
> <br />
> <b>Warning</b>:  mysql_connect() [<a
> href='function.mysql-connect'>function.mysql-connect</a>]: Can't
> connect to MySQL server on 'localhost' (10061) in <b>PHPDocument1</b>
> on line <b>3</b><br />
> Could not connect
>
> Andrew
>

OK, for the sake of the archives, I wish there was an "EDIT" feature
to this list. Copy/paste will get you every time; or, "Insanity: doing
the same thing over and over again and expecting different results."
:-)

At any rate, the point I was TRYING to make is correct, even if the
example wasn't quite right.

Andrew

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