Related Links : Search Engine Optimization | | Search Engine Marketing | Online Marketing | Freelance Programmer| SEO Thailand | SEO Expert | SEO services | PHP Programmer Thailand | SEO Tutorial | What is SEO |

  Home Our SEO Services SEO Expert Consultant Php Programmer Keyword Suggestion Scripts|Articles| Email : sachin {at} jainsachin {dot} com

PHP | Exceptions | Manual | Tutorial | Help

SEO Services



Website Programming in PHP / MYSQL



SEO Tools




    Friends


      Exceptions

      Exceptions

      PHP 5 has an exception model similar to that of other programming languages. An exception can be thrown, and caught ("catched") within PHP. Code may be surrounded in a try block, to facilitate the catching of potential exceptions. Each try must have at least one corresponding catch block. Multiple catch blocks can be used to catch different classes of exeptions. Normal execution (when no exception is thrown within the try block, or when a catch matching the thrown exception's class is not present) will continue after that last catch block defined in sequence. Exceptions can be thrown (or re-thrown) within a catch block.

      When an exception is thrown, code following the statement will not be executed, and PHP will attempt to find the first matching catch block. If an exception is not caught, a PHP Fatal Error will be issued with an "Uncaught Exception ..." message, unless a handler has been defined with set_exception_handler().

      Example #1 Throwing an Exception

      <?php
      function inverse($x) {
          if (!
      $x) {
              throw new 
      Exception('Division by zero.');
          }
          else return 
      1/$x;
      }

      try {
          echo 
      inverse(5) . "\n";
          echo 
      inverse(0) . "\n";
      } catch (
      Exception $e) {
          echo 
      'Caught exception: ',  $e->getMessage(), "\n";
      }

      // Continue execution
      echo 'Hello World';
      ?>

      The above example will output:

      0.2
      Caught exception: Division by zero.
      Hello World
      

      Example #2 Nested Exception

      <?php

      class MyException extends Exception { }

      class 
      Test {
          public function 
      testing() {
              try {
                  try {
                      throw new 
      MyException('foo!');
                  } catch (
      MyException $e) {
                      
      /* rethrow it */
                      
      throw $e;
                  }
              } catch (
      Exception $e) {
                  
      var_dump($e->getMessage());
              }
          }
      }

      $foo = new Test;
      $foo->testing();

      ?>

      The above example will output:

      string(4) "foo!"
      

      Extending Exceptions

      A User defined Exception class can be defined by extending the built-in Exception class. The members and properties below, show what is accessible within the child class that derives from the built-in Exception class.

      Example #3 The Built in Exception class

      <?php
      class Exception
      {
          protected 
      $message 'Unknown exception';   // exception message
          
      protected $code 0;                        // user defined exception code
          
      protected $file;                            // source filename of exception
          
      protected $line;                            // source line of exception

          
      function __construct($message null$code 0);

          final function 
      getMessage();                // message of exception 
          
      final function getCode();                   // code of exception
          
      final function getFile();                   // source filename
          
      final function getLine();                   // source line
          
      final function getTrace();                  // an array of the backtrace()
          
      final function getTraceAsString();          // formated string of trace

          /* Overrideable */
          
      function __toString();                       // formated string for display
      }
      ?>

      If a class extends the built-in Exception class and re-defines the constructor, it is highly recomended that it also call parent::__construct() to ensure all available data has been properly assigned. The __toString() method can be overriden to provide a custom output when the object is presented as a string.

      Example #4 Extending the Exception class

      <?php
      /**
       * Define a custom exception class
       */
      class MyException extends Exception
      {
          
      // Redefine the exception so message isn't optional
          
      public function __construct($message$code 0) {
              
      // some code
          
              // make sure everything is assigned properly
              
      parent::__construct($message$code);
          }

          
      // custom string representation of object
          
      public function __toString() {
              return 
      __CLASS__ ": [{$this->code}]: {$this->message}\n";
          }

          public function 
      customFunction() {
              echo 
      "A Custom function for this type of exception\n";
          }
      }


      /**
       * Create a class to test the exception
       */
      class TestException
      {
          public 
      $var;

          const 
      THROW_NONE    0;
          const 
      THROW_CUSTOM  1;
          const 
      THROW_DEFAULT 2;

          function 
      __construct($avalue self::THROW_NONE) {

              switch (
      $avalue) {
                  case 
      self::THROW_CUSTOM:
                      
      // throw custom exception
                      
      throw new MyException('1 is an invalid parameter'5);
                      break;

                  case 
      self::THROW_DEFAULT:
                      
      // throw default one.
                      
      throw new Exception('2 isnt allowed as a parameter'6);
                      break;

                  default: 
                      
      // No exception, object will be created.
                      
      $this->var $avalue;
                      break;
              }
          }
      }


      // Example 1
      try {
          
      $o = new TestException(TestException::THROW_CUSTOM);
      } catch (
      MyException $e) {      // Will be caught
          
      echo "Caught my exception\n"$e;
          
      $e->customFunction();
      } catch (
      Exception $e) {        // Skipped
          
      echo "Caught Default Exception\n"$e;
      }

      // Continue execution
      var_dump($o);
      echo 
      "\n\n";


      // Example 2
      try {
          
      $o = new TestException(TestException::THROW_DEFAULT);
      } catch (
      MyException $e) {      // Doesn't match this type
          
      echo "Caught my exception\n"$e;
          
      $e->customFunction();
      } catch (
      Exception $e) {        // Will be caught
          
      echo "Caught Default Exception\n"$e;
      }

      // Continue execution
      var_dump($o);
      echo 
      "\n\n";


      // Example 3
      try {
          
      $o = new TestException(TestException::THROW_CUSTOM);
      } catch (
      Exception $e) {        // Will be caught
          
      echo "Default Exception caught\n"$e;
      }

      // Continue execution
      var_dump($o);
      echo 
      "\n\n";


      // Example 4
      try {
          
      $o = new TestException();
      } catch (
      Exception $e) {        // Skipped, no exception
          
      echo "Default Exception caught\n"$e;
      }

      // Continue execution
      var_dump($o);
      echo 
      "\n\n";
      ?>

      SEO Tutorial / Articles





      Php / Mysql Tutorial



      Articles



        Other Topics



        SEO by Jainsachin