Mon, Oct 6, 2008 at 12:17 PM, Daniel Brown <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

>> I will get an error, but if I prefix the value with '@',
>>
>> [EMAIL PROTECTED]"q"];
>
>    The @ is an error control operator, used to buffer the output and
> store it in a variable - $php_errormsg.

>    It's better to write clean, secure code, of course.... but
> sometimes error control is a good thing, too.

why not just use:
$query = isset($_GET['q']) ? $_GET['q'] : '';

that way it's always set.

or even better (what I recommend):
$query = filter_input(INPUT_GET, 'q', FILTER_SANITIZE_STRING);

and get an empty string or a sanitized string, depending on if something exists.

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