error_reporting Sets which PHP errors are reported &reftitle.description; interror_reporting intlevel The error_reporting function sets the error_reporting directive at runtime. PHP has many levels of errors, using this function sets that level for the duration (runtime) of your script. &reftitle.parameters; level The new error_reporting level. It takes on either a bitmask, or named constants. Using named constants is strongly encouraged to ensure compatibility for future versions. As error levels are added, the range of integers increases, so older integer-based error levels will not always behave as expected. The available error level constants are listed below. The actual meanings of these error levels are described in the predefined constants. <function>error_reporting</function> level constants and bit values value constant 1 E_ERROR 2 E_WARNING 4 E_PARSE 8 E_NOTICE 16 E_CORE_ERROR 32 E_CORE_WARNING 64 E_COMPILE_ERROR 128 E_COMPILE_WARNING 256 E_USER_ERROR 512 E_USER_WARNING 1024 E_USER_NOTICE 6143 E_ALL 2048 E_STRICT 4096 E_RECOVERABLE_ERROR 8192 E_DEPRECATED 16384 E_USER_DEPRECATED
&reftitle.returnvalues; Returns the old error_reporting level. &reftitle.changelog; &Version; &Description; 5.0.0 E_STRICT introduced (not part of E_ALL). 5.2.0 E_RECOVERABLE_ERROR introduced. 5.3.0 E_DEPRECATED and E_USER_DEPRECATED introduced. 6 E_STRICT became part of E_ALL. &reftitle.examples; <function>error_reporting</function> examples ]]> &reftitle.notes; Most of E_STRICT errors are evaluated at the compile time thus such errors are not reported in the file where error_reporting is enhanced to include E_STRICT errors (and vice versa). &reftitle.seealso; The display_errors directive The html_errors directive The xmlrpc_errors directive ini_set