I know the way that python acts with circular imports through creating references in sys.modules
. But please see these two modules and the problem with defining an exception class:
a.py
import b
class Err(Exception):
pass
if __name__ == '__main__':
try:
b.f()
except Err:
pass
b.py
from a import Err
def f():
raise Err()
Seems that we should catch the Err but it's not correct. The output of running a.py is:
$ python a.py
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "a.py", line 8, in <module>
b.f()
File "b.py", line 4, in f
raise Err()
a.Err
Ok, now let we add some logs to the code to make it more clear:
a.py:
print 'A1'
import b
print 'A2'
class Err(Exception):
pass
print 'A3', 'id(Err)=%x' % id(Err)
if __name__ == '__main__':
try:
b.f()
except Err:
pass
b.py
print 'B1'
from a import Err
print 'B2', 'id(Err)=%x' % id(Err)
def f():
raise Err()
The output is:
$ py a.py
A1
B1
A1
A2
A3 id(Err)=23fa750
B2 id(Err)=23fa750
A2
A3 id(Err)=23f9740
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "a.py", line 12, in <module>
b.f()
File "b.py", line 7, in f
raise Err()
a.Err
As you can see python defines Err
two times and there is two different class object for Err
at 0x23fa750
and 0x23f9740
. If you test an instance of b.Err
with isinstance
function and a.Err
class you will get False
. So the only way to catch the exception is to use b.Err
instead of Err
. But it's not what we expect at first sight and it's not what we want.
The solution that I know is to create a new module c.py
and define Err
class in it. Then both a.py
and b.py
should import Err
from c.py
. It solves this problem.
But is there a solution that allow us to define Err
in a.py
? Note that the problem is not just about exception classes, any python class may fall into this pit based on how we use its objects in our code.
a
also functions as themain
module, and that causes the different ids. If you'd log the classes forErr
, it will be something like<class 'a.Err'>
and<class '__main__.Err'>
. I'd be curious but doubtful whether that can be avoided here.