NAME

Log::Report::Exception - a collected report

INHERITANCE

SYNOPSIS

# created within a try block
try { error "help!" };
my $exception = $@->wasFatal;
$exception->throw if $exception;

$@->reportFatal;  # combination of above two lines

my $message = $exception->message;   # the Log::Report::Message

if($message->inClass('die')) ...
if($exception->inClass('die')) ...   # same
if($@->wasFatal(class => 'die')) ... # same

DESCRIPTION

In Log::Report, exceptions are not as extended as available in languages as Java: you do not create classes for them. The only thing an exception object does, is capture some information about an (untranslated) report.

METHODS

Constructors

Log::Report::Exception->new(OPTIONS)

    Option     --Default
    message      <required>
    reason       <required>
    report_opts  {}

    . message => Log::Report::Message

    . reason => REASON

    . report_opts => HASH

Accessors

$obj->message

$obj->reason

$obj->report_opts

Processing

$obj->inClass(CLASS|REGEX)

$obj->throw(OPTIONS)

    Insert the message contained in the exception into the currently defined dispatchers. The throw name is commonly known exception related terminology for report.

    The OPTIONS overrule the captured options to Log::Report::report(). This can be used to overrule a destination.

    example: overrule defaults to report

    try { print {to => 'stderr'}, ERROR => 'oops!' };
    $@->reportFatal(to => 'syslog');

SEE ALSO

This module is part of Log-Report distribution version 0.10, built on October 15, 2007. Website: http://perl.overmeer.net/log-report/

LICENSE

Copyrights 2007 by Mark Overmeer. For other contributors see ChangeLog.

This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. See http://www.perl.com/perl/misc/Artistic.html