Right now, I catch the exception in the except Exception: clause, and do print(exception). The result provides no information since it always prints <class 'Exception'>. I knew this used to work in python 2, but how do I do it in python3?
9 Answers
I'm guessing that you need to assign the Exception to a variable. As shown in the Python 3 tutorial:
def fails():
x = 1 / 0
try:
fails()
except Exception as ex:
print(ex)
To give a brief explanation, as is a pseudo-assignment keyword used in certain compound statements to assign or alias the preceding statement to a variable.
In this case, as assigns the caught exception to a variable allowing for information about the exception to stored and used later, instead of needing to be dealt with immediately.
(This is discussed in detail in the Python 3 Language Reference: The try Statement.)
There are other compound statements that use as. The first is the with statement:
@contextmanager
def opening(filename):
f = open(filename)
try:
yield f
finally:
f.close()
with opening(filename) as f:
# ...read data from f...
Here, with statements are used to wrap the execution of a block with methods defined by context managers. This functions like an extended try...except...finally statement in a neat generator package, and the as statement assigns the generator-produced result from the context manager to a variable for extended use.
(This is discussed in detail in the Python 3 Language Reference: The with Statement.)
As of Python 3.10, match statements also use as:
from random import randint
match randint(0, 2):
case 0|1 as low:
print(f"{low} is a low number")
case _:
print("not a low number")
match statements take an expression (in this case, randint(0, 2)) and compare its value to each case branch one at a time until one of them succeeds, at which point it executes that branch's block. In a case branch, as can be used to assign the value of the branch to a variable if that branch succeeds. If it doesn't succeed, it is not bound.
(The match statement is covered by the tutorial and discussed in detail in the Python 3 Language Reference: match Statements.)
Finally, as can be used when importing modules, to alias a module to a different (usually shorter) name:
import foo.bar.baz as fbb
This is discussed in detail in the Python 3 Language Reference: The import Statement.
Comments
These are the changes since python 2:
try:
1 / 0
except Exception as e: # (as opposed to except Exception, e:)
# ^ that will just look for two classes, Exception and e
# for the repr
print(repr(e))
# for just the message, or str(e), since print calls str under the hood
print(e)
# the arguments that the exception has been called with.
# the first one is usually the message. (OSError is different, though)
print(e.args)
You can look into the standard library module traceback for fancier stuff.
Here is the way I like that prints out all of the error stack.
import logging
try:
1 / 0
except Exception as _e:
# any one of the follows:
# print(logging.traceback.format_exc())
logging.error(logging.traceback.format_exc())
The output looks as the follows:
ERROR:root:Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/PATH-TO-YOUR/filename.py", line 4, in <module>
1 / 0
ZeroDivisionError: division by zero
LOGGING_FORMAT :
LOGGING_FORMAT = '%(asctime)s\n File "%(pathname)s", line %(lineno)d\n %(levelname)s [%(message)s]'
Comments
[In Python3]
Let's say you want to handle an IndexError and print the traceback, you can do the following:
from traceback import print_tb
empty_list = []
try:
x = empty_list[100]
except IndexError as index_error:
print_tb(index_error.__traceback__)
Note: You can use the format_tb function instead of print_tb to get the traceback as a string for logging purposes.
Hope this helps.
Comments
You can do:
with self.assertRaisesMessage(ValueError, 'invalid literal for int()'):
int('a')
exceptionexactly? Please post the snippet where this behavior appears and most importanly the part where the nameexceptionis initialized.