Well, if you rule out ob_* and javascript, the best you can probably do
is to just include() your error page or write a function to display it.
You won't be redirected to the page, but it'll show up.
---John Holmes...
-Original Message-
From: Monty [mailto:monty3;hotmail.com]
Sent:
Just turn off display_errors in your php.ini file
On Sat, 9 Nov 2002, Monty wrote:
Is there any way to gracefully handle errors that happen after output to the
screen has begun (the point where header(Location:) doesn't work) without
using ob_ functions?
I have a separate PHP page I'd like
I think the only way to do it the way you want to do it is through
buffering (with the ob_functions or via the php.ini file). Turning off
error printing is another possibility--that way you can have the errors
logged to a file rather than to the screen.
Marco
--
php|architect - The
At 23:42 09.11.2002, Monty said:
[snip]
Is there any way to gracefully handle errors that happen after output to the
screen has begun (the point where header(Location:) doesn't work) without
using ob_ functions?
I have a separate PHP page I'd like to
At 23:57 09.11.2002, Ernest E Vogelsinger said:
[snip]
?php
if ($we_found_an_error) {
$url = 'http://' . $_SERVER['SERVER_NAME'] .
'/my_error_handler.php?any_parameters_you_need';
echo 'script language=JavaScript',
Ok, it's late, and my last post for today, but I need to get this right ;-)
?php
if ($we_found_an_error) {
$url = 'http://' . $_SERVER['SERVER_NAME'] .
'/my_error_handler.php?any_parameters_you_need';
echo 'script language=JavaScript',
imho there are many problems with a handler of this type... since an
error could occur anywhere--in the middle of an HTML tag, or within a
block of client-side script code--you don't know for sure that the
Javascript is going to be interpreted properly by the browser...and
therefore it may look
Original message
From: Joseph Bannon [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Wed, Sep 26, 2001 at 11:09:39AM -0500
Message-ID: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [PHP] handling errors
How do I turn off the error messages that appear at the top of the page? I
have this function below that if an image is not there for
Placing an @ symbol before the function name will suppress any errors.
@GetImageSize()
At 09:09 AM 9/27/2001 +0200, * RzE: wrote:
Original message
From: Joseph Bannon [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Wed, Sep 26, 2001 at 11:09:39AM -0500
Message-ID:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [PHP] handling errors
Original message
From: Jason G. [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Thu, Sep 27, 2001 at 03:25:16AM -0400
Message-ID: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [PHP] handling errors
Placing an @ symbol before the function name will suppress any errors.
@GetImageSize()
/Original message
Reply
Yep, I know it does
, * RzE: wrote:
Original message
From: Jason G. [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Thu, Sep 27, 2001 at 03:25:16AM -0400
Message-ID: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [PHP] handling errors
Placing an @ symbol before the function name will suppress any errors.
@GetImageSize()
/Original message
Reply
Yep, I know
On Thursday 27 September 2001 09:09, * RzE: wrote:
How do I turn off the error messages that appear at the top of the
page? I have this function below that if an image is not there for
$url, it give a warning.
$size = GetImageSize($url);
Example error message below...
Warning:
Right in principle. But there are cases (common ones), like the one shown
above, where errors are unavoidable and normal. For these cases the @
operator is the right thing. Generally you're right though - error
reporting should be set to E_ALL and reasons of avoidable errors/warnings
On Thursday 27 September 2001 12:00, * RzE: wrote:
Right in principle. But there are cases (common ones), like the one
shown above, where errors are unavoidable and normal. For these cases
the @ operator is the right thing. Generally you're right though -
error reporting should be set to
According to my docs (08 Sep 2001) it can.
And http://php.net/getimagesize says the same..
Okay! I never use the function. Yesterday that was a conversation
on this list in which they/he/she said it couldn't. But indeed if it
can there would be a reason to use @.
...
I've now made some
How do I turn off the error messages that appear at the top
of the page? I have this function below that if an image is
not there for $url, it give a warning.
$size = GetImageSize($url);
Example error message below...
Warning: getimagesize: Unable to open 'http://www.yahoo.com'
for
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