57

If I run the code:

connection = manager.connect("I2Cx")

The program crashes and reports a KeyError because I2Cx doesn't exist (it should be I2C).

But if I do:

try:
    connection = manager.connect("I2Cx")
except Exception, e:
    print e

It doesn't print anything for e. I would like to be able to print the exception that was thrown. If I try the same thing with a divide by zero operation it is caught and reported properly in both cases. What am I missing here?

1
  • 4
    Side note: Unless you need pre-2.5 compatibility, you should write except Exception as e: instead of except Exception, e:.
    – abarnert
    Apr 22, 2013 at 18:47

7 Answers 7

95

If it's raising a KeyError with no message, then it won't print anything. If you do...

try:
    connection = manager.connect("I2Cx")
except Exception as e:
    print repr(e)

...you'll at least get the exception class name.

A better alternative is to use multiple except blocks, and only 'catch' the exceptions you intend to handle...

try:
    connection = manager.connect("I2Cx")
except KeyError as e:
    print 'I got a KeyError - reason "%s"' % str(e)
except IndexError as e:
    print 'I got an IndexError - reason "%s"' % str(e)

There are valid reasons to catch all exceptions, but you should almost always re-raise them if you do...

try:
    connection = manager.connect("I2Cx")
except KeyError as e:
    print 'I got a KeyError - reason "%s"' % str(e)
except:
    print 'I got another exception, but I should re-raise'
    raise

...because you probably don't want to handle KeyboardInterrupt if the user presses CTRL-C, nor SystemExit if the try-block calls sys.exit().

11
  • I think his problem was more the catch part than the actual printing ... but yeah this solves that problem also Apr 22, 2013 at 18:36
  • 1
    @JoranBeasley The catch is more likely a typo, since the OP would've gotten a different error had that been in the real code.
    – Aya
    Apr 22, 2013 at 18:41
  • 1
    +1. But KeyboardInterrupt and SystemExit aren't subclasses of Exception, so your last sentence is misleading.
    – abarnert
    Apr 22, 2013 at 18:48
  • 1
    @Aya: If you want to catch all exception types, including KeyboardInterrupt and SystemExit, catch BaseException rather than Exception. This still won't handle bare-string exceptions (or exceptions of unrelated types that you've somehow managed to raise behind the interpreter's back—pretty easy to do accidentally in a C extension module, not so easy to do even on purpose in pure Python); for that, you do need a bare except.
    – abarnert
    Apr 22, 2013 at 19:04
  • 1
    Here's one example in the stdlib. I tend to use it most often when third-party library foo-0.88 raised a ValueError, but 0.89 raises a TypeError or a foo.FooError. (The alternatives are two copy-pasted except blocks, or an except Exception as e: with if isinstance(e, (ValueError, TypeError)): raise, or requiring foo-0.89 or later for no good reason…)
    – abarnert
    Apr 22, 2013 at 20:21
20

I am using Python 3.6 and using a comma between Exception and e does not work. I need to use the following syntax (just for anyone wondering)

try:
    connection = manager.connect("I2Cx")
except KeyError as e:
    print(e.message)
6

You should consult the documentation of whatever library is throwing the exception, to see how to get an error message out of its exceptions.

Alternatively, a good way to debug this kind of thing is to say:

except Exception, e:
    print dir(e)

to see what properties e has - you'll probably find it has a message property or similar.

2

You can also try to use get(), for example:

connection = manager.connect.get("I2Cx")

which won't raise a KeyError in case the key doesn't exist.

You may also use second argument to specify the default value, if the key is not present.

1

If you don't want to handle error just NoneType and use get() e.g.:

manager.connect.get("")
0

I dont think python has a catch :)

try:
    connection = manager.connect("I2Cx")
except Exception, e:
    print e
-2

Try print(e.message) this should be able to print your exception.

try:
    connection = manager.connect("I2Cx")
except Exception, e:
    print(e.message)

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