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PHP defines several constants and provides a mechanism for defining
more at run-time. Constants are much like variables, save for the
two facts that constants must be defined using the
define() function, and that they cannot later be
redefined to another value.
The predefined constants (always available) are:
__FILE__
The name of the script file presently being parsed. If used
within a file which has been included or required, then the
name of the included file is given, and not the name of the
parent file.
__LINE__
The number of the line within the current script file which is
being parsed. If used within a file which has been included or
required, then the position within the included file is given.
PHP_VERSION
The string representation of the version of the PHP parser
presently in use; e.g. '3.0.8-dev'.
PHP_OS
The name of the operating system on which the PHP parser is
executing; e.g. 'Linux'.
TRUE
A true value.
FALSE
A false value.
E_ERROR
Denotes an error other than a parsing error from which
recovery is not possible.
E_WARNING
Denotes a condition where PHP knows something is wrong, but
will continue anyway; these can be caught by the script
itself. An example would be an invalid regexp in
ereg().
E_PARSE
The parser choked on invalid syntax in the script
file. Recovery is not possible.
E_NOTICE
Something happened which may or may not be an error. Execution
continues. Examples include using an unquoted string as a hash
index, or accessing a variable which has not been set.
E_ALL
All of the E_* constants rolled into one. If used with
error_reporting(), will cause any and all
problems noticed by PHP to be reported.
The E_* constants are typically used with the
error_reporting() function for setting the
error reporting level. See all these constants at
Error handling.
You can define additional constants using the
define() function.
Note that these are constants, not C-style macros; only valid
scalar data may be represented by a constant.
<?php
function report_error($file, $line, $message) {
echo "An error occured in $file on line $line: $message.";
}
report_error(__FILE__,__LINE__, "Something went wrong!");
?>