You want to send output to more than one file handle; for example, you want to log messages to the screen and to a file.
Wrap your output with a loop that iterates through your filehandles, as shown in Example 18-4.
function pc_multi_fwrite($fhs,$s,$length=NULL) { if (is_array($fhs)) { if (is_null($length)) { foreach($fhs as $fh) { fwrite($fh,$s); } } else { foreach($fhs as $fh) { fwrite($fh,$s,$length); } } } }
Here's an example:
$fhs['file'] = fopen('log.txt','w') or die($php_errormsg); $fhs['screen'] = fopen('php://stdout','w') or die($php_errormsg); pc_multi_fwrite($fhs,'The space shuttle has landed.');
If you don't want to pass a length argument to fwrite( ) (or you always want to), you can eliminate that check from your pc_multi_fwrite( ). This version doesn't accept a $length argument:
function pc_multi_fwrite($fhs,$s) { if (is_array($fhs)) { foreach($fhs as $fh) { fwrite($fh,$s); } } }
Documentation on fwrite( ) at http://www.php.net/fwrite.
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