Is it possible to have a function automatically contain the line number and the file that the function was CALLED in,
as if i call __LINE__
or __FILE__
in the function it will use the line and file the function definition is in.
but i dont want to have to pass __LINE__
and __FILE__
into the function every time.
so if i set them as the default params, do they come from the function definition, or where it is being called from?
Doing what you suggest doesn't seem to work.
You can do it like this, but I'm not sure why you want to do it and that there isn't a better approach to what you are trying to achieve - see Wrikken's answer.
It's so late but maybe can be useful, you can use get_called_class(), for the name of class who is called, and do not pass like a parameter insted of CLASS.
if you want to use this information in some kind of error message, there is a function
trigger_error()
which will raise PHP native error, so, therefore, it will be shown in usual PHP manner - with filename, line number and supplied text.Most neat feature of this function is behaving according to current error handling settings:
will print out directly to screen an error message like this:
very handy for developing
while this code
will be put into error log for the future reference
obligatory for the production
The only way would be using
debug_backtrace()
, but as the name says: it is for debugging. Your code should not attach any meaning or functionality in production based on where/when it's called.