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Home/ Questions/Q 8462853
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 10, 20262026-06-10T14:17:25+00:00 2026-06-10T14:17:25+00:00

I have a function that returns false for many reasons. Is it possible to

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I have a function that returns false for many reasons. Is it possible to also make it throw catchable errors without breaking other code relying on it being true or false?

Or will I have to return arrays or return error resasons and only true on success?

What is the best aproach for this?

Some idea based on Daniel’s approach:

__FUNCTION__ should return the functions name

$errors = array();
function someFunction(){
    if(ErrorTWOhappened()){
        global $errors[__FUNCTION__] = "ERRORtwo";
        return false;
    }
    if(someOtherError()){
        global $errors[__FUNCTION__] = "someOtherError";
        return false;
    }
    return true;
}
if(!someFunction())echo $errors['someFunction'];
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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-10T14:17:27+00:00Added an answer on June 10, 2026 at 2:17 pm

    In order not to break backwards compatibility but to provide more information, you can create a second function to log error messages. In a procedual approach, this could look like this:

    $myFunctionErrors = array();
    function myFunctionSetError($error) {
        global $myFunctionErrors;
        $myFunctionsErrors[] = $error;
    }
    
    function myFunctionGetErrors() {
        global $myFunctionErrors;
        return $myFunctionErrors;
    }
    

    And just call myFunctionSetError('whatever'); inside your existing function. Note: myFunction is just a prefix, name it after your real function.

    Note also: You could obviously use the array directly. For better maintainability, however, I recommend you using functions you can modify later on to easily change the logic behind it.

    If you prefer an object oriented approach, you can also set up a class for that and prevent possible side-effects regarding the global $myFunctionErrors variable.

    class MyFunctionErrorLogger
    {
        protected static $errors = array();
    
        public function setError($error)
        {
            self::$errors[] = $error;
        }
    
        public static function getErrors()
        {
            return self::$errors;
        }
    }
    

    Or, if you prefer a “hacked” way, extend the function a little. By adding another function parameter with a false default value. Old function calls won’t be affected by this but you ca provide this extra parameter in your future calls.

    function myFunction($myParam, ..., $errorsAsException = false)
    {
        // ...
        // Ooops, error case
        if ($errorAsException)
            throw new WhatEverException('errormsg');
        else
            return false;
        // ...
    }
    
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