I'm not that experienced with error handling in Python and was wondering, in terms of style, is it worth catching and printing errors that would be raised anyway if you don't explicitly handle it in the code?
For example:
my_func(path):
try:
some_func_that_opens_file(path) # this would raise and IOError by itself
except IOerror as ex:
print ex # or alternatively print 'your file doesn't exist'
Or is the purpose of try/except rather catching an error and proceeding to do something else in spite of the error (where the program would otherwise fail)? E.g.:
my_func(path):
try:
some_func_that_opens_file(path) # this would raise and IOError by itself
except IOerror:
fixed = fix_path(path) # makes the path what it needs to be
some_func_that_opens_file(fixed)
I searched a fair bit before asking this so hopefully my question isn't redundant.
Thank you!