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- <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
- <!-- EN-Revision: 15103 -->
- <!-- Reviewed: no -->
- <!-- Traducir todo de nuevo-->
- <sect1 id="zend.exception.using">
- <title>Using Exceptions</title>
- <para>
- <classname>Zend_Exception</classname> is simply the base class for all exceptions thrown within Zend Framework.
- </para>
- <example id="zend.exception.using.example">
- <title>Catching an Exception</title>
- <para>
- The following code listing demonstrates how to catch an exception thrown in a Zend Framework class:
- </para>
- <programlisting role="php"><![CDATA[
- try {
- // Calling Zend_Loader::loadClass() with a non-existant class will cause
- // an exception to be thrown in Zend_Loader
- Zend_Loader::loadClass('nonexistantclass');
- } catch (Zend_Exception $e) {
- echo "Caught exception: " . get_class($e) . "\n";
- echo "Message: " . $e->getMessage() . "\n";
- // Other code to recover from the error
- }
- ]]></programlisting>
- </example>
- <para>
- <classname>Zend_Exception</classname> can be used as a catch-all exception class in a
- catch block to trap all exceptions thrown by Zend Framework classes. This can
- be useful when the program can not recover by catching a specific exception type.
- </para>
- <para>
- The documentation for each Zend Framework
- component and class will contain specific information on which methods
- throw exceptions, the circumstances that cause an exception to be thrown,
- and the class of all exceptions that may be thrown.
- </para>
- </sect1>
- <!--
- vim:se ts=4 sw=4 et:
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