Wanted to get some argument/input with the script and raise an exception when the value is not expected.
To simplify the scenario:
#!/usr/bin/env python3
foo = None or raise ValueError
But the following error was seen:
File "./raise_on_assignment.py", line 3
foo = None or raise ValueError
^
SyntaxError: invalid syntax
I know the error could be eliminated by breaking it into multi-lines, like:
#!/usr/bin/env python3
foo = None
if not foo:
raise ValueError
But, is there a way to make it with a one-liner?
raise ValueError
isn't an expression.foo
isNone
(meaning the user didn't supply the value for the argument), within the same line.if foo is None:<newline>raise ValueError
broken over two lines will be the most readable way. If you don't like how it looks, you could wrap that in a function. Something likedef assert_truthy(val):<newline>if val is None:<newline>raise ValueError(f"The value was None!")
. Then you'd just doassert_truthy(foo)
if you want a one-line solution. (Note that<newline>
is just me indicating a newline. That is not valid Python syntax).