Jeff Pang wrote:
I turned off the STDOUT/STDERR in my program in order to avoid the
> possible mussy error-infos appearing on screen.While I wouldn't
> lose the valuable infos,since I re-defined both signal 'die'
> and 'warn' handler and wrote the results to files.


--
Jeff Pang
NetEase AntiSpam Team
http://corp.netease.com


So why wouldn't you redirect STDOUT and STDERR to this file too? Many other Perl's errors, like division by zero, are not handle via die or warn. And these messages are printed out even if encountered in an eval.


--

Just my 0.00000002 million dollars worth,
   --- Shawn

"For the things we have to learn before we can do them,
we learn by doing them."
  Aristotle

"The man who sets out to carry a cat by its tail learns something that
will always be useful and which will never grow dim or doubtful."
  Mark Twain

"Believe in the Divine, but paddle away from the rocks."
  Hindu Proverb

* Perl tutorials at http://perlmonks.org/?node=Tutorials
* A searchable perldoc is at http://perldoc.perl.org/


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