Error Handling, Exceptions, Debugging, and Logging in PHP
Handle failures responsibly and build debugging habits that support stable production applications.
Inside this chapter
- Why Error Handling Matters
- Exceptions
- Debugging Tools and Habits
- Logging
- Business Example
Series navigation
Study the chapters in order for the clearest path from PHP basics to backend architecture, security, deployment, and production engineering habits. Use the navigation at the bottom to move smoothly through the full tutorial series.
Why Error Handling Matters
Production software must handle unexpected situations such as missing inputs, invalid files, database failures, network errors, and permission problems. Good error handling improves reliability, security, and user trust.
Exceptions
try {
throw new Exception("Something went wrong");
} catch (Exception $e) {
echo $e->getMessage();
}
Exceptions provide a structured way to represent failures and handle them at the right level of the application.
Debugging Tools and Habits
PHP developers often inspect logs, check server error output, use local debugging extensions, trace request input, and isolate failing code paths. Strong debugging is less about random guessing and more about controlled observation.
Logging
error_log("Payment API request failed");
Logs help developers understand production behavior. Good logs include enough context to diagnose issues without exposing sensitive information.
Business Example
If order creation fails due to a temporary database issue, the system should log the failure, return a safe message to the user, and preserve enough operational context for engineers to investigate later.