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.

Приклад #1 The Built in Exception class

<?php
class Exception implements Throwable
{
protected
$message = 'Unknown exception'; // exception message
private $string; // __toString cache
protected $code = 0; // user defined exception code
protected $file; // source filename of exception
protected $line; // source line of exception
private $trace; // backtrace
private $previous; // previous exception if nested exception

public function __construct($message = '', $code = 0, Throwable $previous = null);

final private function
__clone(); // Inhibits cloning of exceptions.

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

// Overrideable
public function __toString(); // formatted string for display
}
?>

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

Зауваження:

Exceptions cannot be cloned. Attempting to clone an Exception will result in a fatal E_ERROR error.

Приклад #2 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, Throwable $previous = null) {
// some code

// make sure everything is assigned properly
parent::__construct($message, $code, $previous);
}

// 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 is not 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); // Null
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); // Null
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); // Null
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); // TestException
echo "\n\n";
?>
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User Contributed Notes 5 notes

up
16
iamhiddensomewhere at gmail dot com
15 years ago
As previously noted exception linking was recently added (and what a god-send it is, it certainly makes layer abstraction (and, by association, exception tracking) easier).Since <5.3 was lacking this useful feature I took some initiative and creating a custom exception class that all of my exceptions inherit from:<?phpclass SystemException extends Exception{    private $previous;        public function __construct($message, $code = 0, Exception $previous = null)    {        parent::__construct($message, $code);                if (!is_null($previous))        {            $this -> previous = $previous;        }    }        public function getPrevious()    {        return $this -> previous;    }}?>Hope you find it useful.
up
6
Hayley Watson
6 years ago
Check the other SPL Exception classes and extend one of those if your intended exception is a subclass of one of those. This allows more finesse when catching.
up
5
michaelrfairhurst at gmail dot com
12 years ago
Custom exception classes can allow you to write tests that prove your exceptionsare meaningful. Usually testing exceptions, you either assert the message equalssomething in which case you can't change the message format without refactoring,or not make any assertions at all in which case you can get misleading messageslater down the line. Especially if your $e->getMessage is something complicatedlike a var_dump'ed context array.The solution is to abstract the error information from the Exception class intoproperties that can be tested everywhere except the one test for your formatting.<?phpclass TestableException extends Exception {        private $property;        function __construct($property) {                $this->property = $property;                parent::__construct($this->format($property));        }        function format($property) {                return "I have formatted: " . $property . "!!";        }        function getProperty() {                return $this->property;        }}function testSomethingThrowsTestableException() {        try {                throw new TestableException('Property');        } Catch (TestableException $e) {                $this->assertEquals('Property', $e->getProperty());        }}function testExceptionFormattingOnlyOnce() {        $e = new TestableException;        $this->assertEquals('I have formatted: properly for the only required test!!',                $e->format('properly for the only required test')        );}?>
up
4
sapphirepaw.org
15 years ago
Support for exception linking was added in PHP 5.3.0. The getPrevious() method and the $previous argument to the constructor are not available on any built-in exceptions in older versions of PHP.
up
1
Dor
13 years ago
It's important to note that subclasses of the Exception class will be caught by the default Exception handler<?php        /**     * NewException     * Extends the Exception class so that the $message parameter is now mendatory.     *      */    class NewException extends Exception {        //$message is now not optional, just for the extension.        public function __construct($message, $code = 0, Exception $previous = null) {            parent::__construct($message, $code, $previous);        }    }        /**     * TestException     * Tests and throws Exceptions.     */    class TestException {        const NONE = 0;        const NORMAL = 1;        const CUSTOM = 2;        public function __construct($type = self::NONE) {            switch ($type) {                case 1:                     throw new Exception('Normal Exception');                    break;                case 2:                    throw new NewException('Custom Exception');                    break;                default:                    return 0; //No exception is thrown.            }        }    }        try {        $t = new TestException(TestException::CUSTOM);    }    catch (Exception $e) {        print_r($e); //Exception Caught    }    ?>Note that if an Exception is caught once, it won't be caught again (even for a more specific handler).
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