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I am aware of the die() command in PHP which stops a script early, how can I do this in Python?

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I just googled for this Q, not recalling that I'd already asked it. Woo StackOverflow! – Teifion Jan 11 '09 at 16:13

7 Answers

up vote 176 down vote accepted
import sys
sys.exit()

details from the sys module documentation:

exit([arg])

Exit from Python. This is implemented by raising the SystemExit exception, so cleanup actions specified by finally clauses of try statements are honored, and it is possible to intercept the exit attempt at an outer level. The optional argument arg can be an integer giving the exit status (defaulting to zero), or another type of object. If it is an integer, zero is considered successful termination'' and any nonzero value is considered abnormal termination'' by shells and the like. Most systems require it to be in the range 0-127, and produce undefined results otherwise. Some systems have a convention for assigning specific meanings to specific exit codes, but these are generally underdeveloped; Unix programs generally use 2 for command line syntax errors and 1 for all other kind of errors. If another type of object is passed, None is equivalent to passing zero, and any other object is printed to sys.stderr and results in an exit code of 1. In particular, sys.exit("some error message") is a quick way to exit a program when an error occurs.

Note that this is the 'nice' way to exit. @glyphtwistedmatrix below points out that if you want a 'hard exit', you can use os.exit(errorcode*), though it's likely os-specific to some extent (it might not take an errorcode under windows, for example), and it definitely is less friendly since it doesn't let the interpreter do any cleanup before the process dies.

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Another way is:

raise SystemExit
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I like this way more :) – Heather Aug 4 '11 at 11:15
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@Alessa: it looks more elegant, but it's not recommended: you're directly raising a builtin exception instead of the preferable (and overwrittable) sys.exit wrapper – MestreLion May 4 '12 at 7:06

While you should generally prefer sys.exit because it is more "friendly" to other code, all it actually does is raise an exception.

If you are sure that you need to exit a process immediately, and you might be inside of some exception handler which would catch SystemExit, there is another function - os._exit - which terminates immediately at the C level and does not perform any of the normal tear-down of the interpreter; for example, hooks registered with the "atexit" module are not executed.

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from sys import exit
exit()

As a parameter you can pass an exit code, which will be returned to OS. Default is 0.

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Presumably sys.exit() doesn't work (doesn't kill the process, just kills the thread) if raised by a background thread?

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Can anybody confirm this? – Zut Jul 13 '12 at 13:33
Yes sys.exit() raises SystemExit exception in current thread. – Dmitry Trofimov Oct 23 '12 at 14:34

You can use quit(). It's very simple.

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You can also use simply exit()
But keep in mind that sys.exit(), exit(), quit(), os._exit(0) kill the python interpreter. Therefore if it appears in script called from another script by execfile() it stops execution of both scripts. See here how to avoid this: Stop execution of a script called with execfile

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