Except that this way is not really ideal IMO. I am a recent Perl Best Practices convert to the idea that you should die/croak on an error instead of returning undef. This means the caller has to explicitly catch the exception (with eval) or his application will die, which in turn means there'll be less cases of forgotten error checks. Using exceptions you can also pass a helpful error message up to the caller, or an exception object which contains useful data. Yes, you'll do a lot of eval'ing, which is ugly, but it's much more defensive programming.


Debugging is twice as hard as writing the code in the first place. Therefore, if you write the code as cleverly as possible, you are, by definition, not smart enough to debug it. -- Brian W. Kernighan

In reply to Re^3: Log4perl: Using appropriate Log Levels by tirwhan
in thread Log4perl: Using appropriate Log Levels by loris

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