Is there a way knowing (at coding time) which exceptions to expect when executing python code? I end up catching the base Exception class 90% of the time since I don't know which exception type might be thrown(and don't tell me to read the documentation. many times an exception can be propagated from the deep. and many times the documentation is not updated or correct). Is there some kind of tool to check this ? (like by reading the python code and libs)?
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I guess a solution could be only imprecise because of lack of static typing rules. I'm not aware of some tool that checks exceptions, but you could come up with your own tool matching your needs (a good chance to play a little with static analysis). As a first attempt, you could write a function that builds an AST, finds all Let
Build the AST using the
Then define a
And walk the AST collecting
You may continue by resolving symbols using compiler symbol tables, analyzing data dependencies, etc. Or you may just deduce, that |
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Noone explained so far, why you can't have a full, 100% correct list of exceptions, so I thought it's worth commenting on. One of the reasons is a first-class function. Let's say that you have a function like this:
Now The documentation and the source analysers are the only "serious" sources of information here. Just keep in mind what they cannot do. |
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I ran into this when using socket, I wanted to find out all the error conditions I would run in to (so rather than trying to create errors and figure out what socket does I just wanted a concise list). Ultimately I ended up grep'ing "/usr/lib64/python2.4/test/test_socket.py" for "raise":
Which is a pretty concise list of errors. Now of course this only works on a case by case basis and depends on the tests being accurate (which they usually are). Otherwise you need to pretty much catch all exceptions, log them and dissect them and figure out how to handle them (which with unit testing wouldn't be to difficult). |
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The correct tool to solve this problem is unittests. If you are having exceptions raised by real code that the unittests do not raise, then you need more unittests. Consider this
duck can be any object Obviously you can have an Now supposing you have code like this
If it raises an A handy technique is to catch and maybe reraise the exception like this
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normally, you'd need to catch exception only around a few lines of code. You wouldn't want to put your whole docs have an exhaustive list of built-in exceptions. don't try to except those exception that you're not expecting, they might be handled/expected in the calling code. edit: what might be thrown depends on obviously on what you're doing! accessing random element of a sequence: Just try to run those few lines in IDLE and cause an exception. But unittest would be a better solution, naturally. |
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You should only catch exceptions that you will handle. Catching all exceptions by their concrete types is nonsense. You should catch specific exceptions you can and will handle. For other exceptions, you may write a generic catch that catches "base Exception", logs it (use If you really gonna handle all exceptions and are sure none of them are fatal (for example, if you're running the code in some kind of a sandboxed environment), then your approach of catching generic BaseException fits your aims. You might be also interested in language exception reference, not a reference for the library you're using. If the library reference is really poor and it doesn't re-throw its own exceptions when catching system ones, the only useful approach is to run tests (maybe add it to test suite, because if something is undocumented, it may change!). Delete a file crucial for your code and check what exception is being thrown. Supply too much data and check what error it yields. You will have to run tests anyway, since, even if the method of getting the exceptions by source code existed, it wouldn't give you any idea how you should handle any of those. Maybe you should be showing error message "File needful.txt is not found!" when you catch |
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raisestrings as well, not justBaseExceptionsubclasses. So if you're calling into library code that is out of your control, evenexcept Exceptionis not sufficient, since it won't catch string exceptions. As others have pointed out, you're barking up the wrong tree here. – Daniel Pryden Oct 19 at 22:42except Exceptionworks fine for catching string exceptions in Python 2.6 and later. – Jeffrey Harris Dec 12 at 2:30