3

I want to catch a Python exception and print it rather than re-raising it. For example:

def f(x):
    try:
        return 1/x
    except:
        print <exception_that_was_raised>   

This should then do:

>>> f(0)
'ZeroDivisionError'

without an exception being raised.

Is there a way to do this, other than listing each possible exception in a giant try-except-except...except clause?

3 Answers 3

9

use the message attribute of exception or e.__class__.__name__ if you want the name of the Base exception class , i.e ZeroDivisionError' in your case

In [30]: def f(x):
        try:
                return 1/x
        except Exception as e:
            print e.message
   ....:         

In [31]: f(2)
Out[31]: 0

In [32]: f(0)
integer division or modulo by zero

In python 3.x the message attribute has been removed so you can simply use print(e) or e.args[0] there, and e.__class__.__name__ remains same.

5
  • 1
    Or if you just want the exception's name: print e.__class__.__name__
    – mgilson
    Nov 13, 2012 at 15:59
  • @mgilson's comment is really what the OP asked for; print repr(e) would also work. Nov 13, 2012 at 16:04
  • Good, but this won't work if you raise an instance of class Whoa: pass Nov 13, 2012 at 16:05
  • @alex_jordan -- If you raise things which aren't Exceptions, you deserve what you get I think ... quickly looking over the documentation, I'm not even positive that behaviour is well defined.
    – mgilson
    Nov 13, 2012 at 16:06
  • @BurhanKhalid I think repr(e) returns kind of combination of e.__class__.__name__ and e.args, i.e output is ZeroDivisionError('integer division or modulo by zero',) Nov 13, 2012 at 16:09
3

This is how I work:

try:
    0/0
except Exception as e:
    print e
2
try:
    0/0
except ZeroDivisionError,e:
    print e
#will print "integer division or modulo by zero"

Something like this, Pythonic duck typing lets us to convert error instances into strings on the fly=) Good luck =)

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