I have a try...except block in my code and When an exception is throw. I really just want to continue with the code because in that case, everything is still able to run just fine. The problem is if you leave the except: block empty or with a #do nothing, it gives you a syntax error. I can't use continue because its not in a loop. Is there a keyword i can use that tells the code to just keep going?
4 Answers
except Exception:
pass
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96except Exception: pass # important not to swallow other exceptions!– Roger PateFeb 22, 2009 at 16:46
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29This will catch SystemExit, KeyboardInterrupt and other things that you probably don't want to catch. Jan 2, 2010 at 1:13
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2It won't catch KeyboardInterrupt. For example:
while True:
try:
f = open('filedoesnotexist.txt')`except:
pass
KeyboardInterrupt stops and exits the code. Jul 24, 2012 at 15:59 -
19@ChthonicProject a bare
except
will catch any exception, including a KeyboardInterrupt, but only if it happens inside thetry
. In your example there, a KeyboardInterrupt can occur before thetry
or inside theexcept
, where it won't be caught. If you run an example likewhile True:
try: pass
except: pass
, you'll find that the KeyboardInterrupt gets caught just about 50% of the time. If youtime.sleep(1)
inside thetry
, you'll find that it gets caught almost every time. Mar 22, 2013 at 8:39 -
2This stops executing after the first exception. What I just want to totally ignore all exceptions, eg
print('this'); 1/0; print('this too');
? And say I have 10 commands, don't want to write 10 try except pass blocks. Nov 2, 2018 at 0:46
Generic answer
The standard "nop" in Python is the pass
statement:
try:
do_something()
except Exception:
pass
Using except Exception
instead of a bare except
avoid catching exceptions like SystemExit
, KeyboardInterrupt
etc.
Python 2
Because of the last thrown exception being remembered in Python 2, some of the objects involved in the exception-throwing statement are being kept live indefinitely (actually, until the next exception). In case this is important for you and (typically) you don't need to remember the last thrown exception, you might want to do the following instead of pass
:
try:
do_something()
except Exception:
sys.exc_clear()
This clears the last thrown exception.
Python 3
In Python 3, the variable that holds the exception instance gets deleted on exiting the except
block. Even if the variable held a value previously, after entering and exiting the except
block it becomes undefined again.
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47This is a better answer than the one that was accepted because it uses "except Exception:" instead of just "except:" which as others have pointed out will improperly swallow other things that you don't want to catch like SystemExit and KeyboardInterrupt.– aculichJul 11, 2011 at 21:50
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4+1 It also clears the error which is important when running unittests and expecting exceptions Oct 26, 2011 at 13:50
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7Note that
exc_clear
was removed in python 3. docs.python.org/3/whatsnew/3.0.html#index-22. For some ways to address this in Python 3 see here: cosmicpercolator.com/2016/01/13/…– bcattleMar 6, 2018 at 18:59 -
See stackoverflow.com/a/53575187/3140992 for quickly ignoring multiple exceptions Dec 1, 2018 at 21:26
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1One also can use
...
(ellipsis) inexcept
clause instead ofpass
:except Exception: ...
Mar 12, 2019 at 14:25
There's a new way to do this coming in Python 3.4:
from contextlib import suppress
with suppress(Exception):
# your code
Here's the commit that added it: http://hg.python.org/cpython/rev/406b47c64480
And here's the author, Raymond Hettinger, talking about this and all sorts of other Python hotness (relevant bit at 43:30): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OSGv2VnC0go
If you wanted to emulate the bare except
keyword and also ignore things like KeyboardInterrupt
—though you usually don't—you could use with suppress(BaseException)
.
Edit: Looks like ignored
was renamed to suppress
before the 3.4 release.
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2I'm not sure I like this solution... I guess the idea is we've replaced 3 lines with just 1 (the try, except, and pass are all merged into one.) The main thing I object to is how this introduces a new keyword that seems to vindicate something you probably shouldn't be doing... it seems like you should always at least log exceptions you're catching... Oct 14, 2013 at 13:13
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When an exception is raised will it continue the code after the try/catch or whatever is outside of the
with
block?– MikhailNov 13, 2013 at 7:45 -
5This is equivalent to wrapping your code in a
try...catch: pass
, so if an exception is raised inside the block, execution will continue after the end of the block. Nov 14, 2013 at 8:45 -
2@ArtOfWarfare What if I said, I'll give you an integer, but sometimes I'll give it to you in a singleton tuple, and I won't tell you when I do one or the other; now your job is to always give me back the integer? Perhaps you would appreciate being able to write something like
with suppress(TypeError): return data[0]
(longer example: pastebin.com/gcvAGqEP)– AirMay 2, 2014 at 21:03 -
9FYI, django revert the use of
with suppress(Exception)
on 2017-09 , because try/except performs better. Check this commits Reverted "Fixed #27818 -- Replaced try/except/pass with contextlib.su… Nov 7, 2017 at 7:00