Issue 15806: Add context manager for the "try: ... except: pass" pattern (original) (raw)

Issue15806

process

Status: closed Resolution: fixed
Dependencies: Superseder: Rename contextlib.ignore to contextlib.suppress View:19266
Assigned To: ncoghlan Nosy List: alex, barry, chris.jerdonek, cvrebert, eric.smith, ezio.melotti, giampaolo.rodola, jcea, loewis, ncoghlan, pitrou, python-dev, rhettinger, zaytsev
Priority: low Keywords:

Created on 2012-08-29 05:15 by rhettinger, last changed 2022-04-11 14:57 by admin. This issue is now closed.

Messages (15)
msg169337 - (view) Author: Raymond Hettinger (rhettinger) * (Python committer) Date: 2012-08-29 05:15
It is a somewhat common pattern to write: try: do_something() except SomeException: pass To search examples in the standard library (or any other code base) use: $ egrep -C2 "except( [A-Za-z]+)?:" *py | grep -C2 "pass" In the Python2.7 Lib directory alone, we find 213 examples. I suggest a context manager be added that can ignore specifie exceptions. Here's a possible implementation: class Ignore: ''' Context manager to ignore particular exceptions''' def __init__(self, *ignored_exceptions): self.ignored_exceptions = ignored_exceptions def __enter__(self): return self def __exit__(self, exctype, excinst, exctb): return exctype in self.ignored_exceptions The usage would be something like this: with Ignore(IndexError, KeyError): print(s[t]) Here's a real-world example taken from zipfile.py: def _check_zipfile(fp): try: if _EndRecData(fp): return True # file has correct magic number except IOError: pass return False With Ignore() context manager, the code cleans-up nicely: def _check_zipfile(fp): with Ignore(IOError): return bool(EndRecData(fp)) # file has correct magic number return False I think this would make a nice addition to contextlib.
msg169340 - (view) Author: Raymond Hettinger (rhettinger) * (Python committer) Date: 2012-08-29 05:35
Hmm, the __exit__ method was doing exact matches by exception type, so KeyError wouldn't match LookupError or Exception. There are probably a number of ways to fix this, but it may be easiest to use the builtin exception catching mechanisms: class Ignore: ''' Context manager to ignore particular exceptions''' def __init__(self, *ignored_exceptions): self.ignored_exceptions = ignored_exceptions def __enter__(self): return self def __exit__(self, exctype, excinst, exctb): if exctype is not None: try: raise except self.ignored_exceptions: return True
msg169341 - (view) Author: Alex Gaynor (alex) * (Python committer) Date: 2012-08-29 05:55
Why not just: issubclass(exctype, self.exception_types)?
msg169342 - (view) Author: Raymond Hettinger (rhettinger) * (Python committer) Date: 2012-08-29 06:06
Yes, something along those lines would be *much* better: class Ignore: ''' Context manager to ignore particular exceptions''' def __init__(self, *ignored_exceptions): self.ignored_exceptions = ignored_exceptions def __enter__(self): return self def __exit__(self, exctype, excinst, exctb): return exctype and issubclass(exctype, self.ignored_exceptions)
msg169343 - (view) Author: Alyssa Coghlan (ncoghlan) * (Python committer) Date: 2012-08-29 06:20
I'd just write it with @contextmanager. Making it easier to cleanly factor out exception handling is one of the main reasons that exists. @contextmanager def ignored(*exceptions): """Context manager to ignore particular exceptions""" try: yield except exceptions: pass While the class based version would likely be fractionally faster, the generator based version is more obviously correct.
msg169346 - (view) Author: Ezio Melotti (ezio.melotti) * (Python committer) Date: 2012-08-29 07:28
I think I'm -1 on this. This saves two lines, but makes the code less explicit, it can't be used for try/except/else or try/except/except, it requires an extra import, the implementation is simple enough that it doesn't necessary need to be in the stdlib, it might encourage bad style, and it's slower. Some of these downsides are indeed somewhat weak, but the upside of saving two lines is quite weak too IMHO.
msg169348 - (view) Author: Martin v. Löwis (loewis) * (Python committer) Date: 2012-08-29 07:51
I think the zipfile example is really a bad example. IMO, it would best be written as try: return bool(EndRecData(fp)) except IOError: return False i.e. there shouldn't be a pass statement at all in this code, and the if can be dropped whether you use try-except or with.
msg169357 - (view) Author: Alyssa Coghlan (ncoghlan) * (Python committer) Date: 2012-08-29 09:55
(Note: I'm not yet convinced this is a good idea. I'm definitely considering it, though) As with many context managers, a key benefit here is in the priming effect for readers. In this code: try: # Whatever except (A, B, C): pass the reader doesn't know that (A, B, C) exceptions will be ignored until the end. The with statement form makes it clear before you start reading the code that certain exceptions won't propagate: with ignored(A, B, C): # Whatever I'm not worried that it makes things less explicit - it's pretty obvious what a context manager called "ignored" that accepts an arbitrary number of exceptions is going to do. One other thing it does is interact well with ExitStack - you can stick this in the stack of exit callbacks to suppress exceptions that you don't want to propagate.
msg169358 - (view) Author: Ezio Melotti (ezio.melotti) * (Python committer) Date: 2012-08-29 10:06
> As with many context managers, a key benefit here is > in the priming effect for readers. The "focus" is mostly on what it's being executed rather than what it's being ignored though. "Do this operation and ignore these exceptions if they occur" vs. "Ignore these exceptions if they occur while doing this operation." > I'm not worried that it makes things less explicit - it's pretty > obvious what a context manager called "ignored" that accepts an > arbitrary number of exceptions is going to do. It's still understandable, but while I'm familiar with the semantics of try/except, I wouldn't be sure if e.g. this just ignored those specific exceptions or even their subclasses without checking the doc/code. > One other thing it does is interact well with ExitStack - you can > stick this in the stack of exit callbacks to suppress exceptions that > you don't want to propagate. This seems a good use case.
msg169363 - (view) Author: Antoine Pitrou (pitrou) * (Python committer) Date: 2012-08-29 10:51
If this is desirable then I think it would be better as a classmethod of Exception: with KeyError.trap(): do_something()
msg169364 - (view) Author: Eric V. Smith (eric.smith) * (Python committer) Date: 2012-08-29 11:08
While the classmethod version has some appeal, it doesn't extend well to handling multiple exception types. I'm -0 on this, in any event. I think the original code is more clear. Why force people to learn (or recognize) a second idiom for something so simple?
msg183934 - (view) Author: Roundup Robot (python-dev) (Python triager) Date: 2013-03-11 05:27
New changeset 406b47c64480 by Raymond Hettinger in branch 'default': Issue #15806: Add contextlib.ignored(). http://hg.python.org/cpython/rev/406b47c64480
msg183942 - (view) Author: Alyssa Coghlan (ncoghlan) * (Python committer) Date: 2013-03-11 08:02
FTR, Raymond and I discussed this on IRC and I gave it a +1 before he committed it. The advantage the callable form has over a class method is that it readily scales to ignoring multiple exception types in a single with statement.
msg195879 - (view) Author: Yury V. Zaytsev (zaytsev) Date: 2013-08-22 11:54
Hi Raymond, This is a brilliant idea, but before it hits the streets, couldn't you possibly consider extending it with a kwarg to control the depth of the exception stack? The use case I have for that are snippets like this: with ignored(ValueError, TypeError), ignored(ValueError, TypeError), ignored(ValueError, TypeError): a() b() c() Or else I could write this as with ignored(ValueError, TypeError): a() with ignored(ValueError, TypeError): b() with ignored(ValueError, TypeError): c() ... but either way it looks bad. This looks a bit better to me: with ignored(ValueError, TypeError, depth=3): a() b() c() If you deem this to be unacceptably unpythonic, then please ignore my suggestion.
msg195890 - (view) Author: Yury V. Zaytsev (zaytsev) Date: 2013-08-22 13:44
Actually, please disregard my idea. It's way to dangerous, especially in the case of multiple exceptions to ignore :-(
History
Date User Action Args
2022-04-11 14:57:35 admin set github: 60010
2013-10-16 22:31:55 belopolsky set superseder: Rename contextlib.ignore to contextlib.suppress
2013-10-16 22:31:31 belopolsky link issue19266 dependencies
2013-10-11 16:51:53 giampaolo.rodola set nosy: + giampaolo.rodola
2013-08-22 13:44:51 zaytsev set messages: +
2013-08-22 11:54:09 zaytsev set nosy: + zaytsevmessages: +
2013-03-16 00:44:20 barry set nosy: + barry
2013-03-11 08:02:21 ncoghlan set messages: +
2013-03-11 05:28:04 rhettinger set status: open -> closedresolution: fixed
2013-03-11 05:27:06 python-dev set nosy: + python-devmessages: +
2012-08-29 11:38:25 jcea set nosy: + jcea
2012-08-29 11:08:31 eric.smith set nosy: + eric.smithmessages: +
2012-08-29 10:51:09 pitrou set nosy: + pitroumessages: +
2012-08-29 10:06:59 ezio.melotti set messages: +
2012-08-29 09:55:28 ncoghlan set messages: +
2012-08-29 08:01:43 cvrebert set nosy: + cvrebert
2012-08-29 07:51:30 loewis set nosy: + loewismessages: +
2012-08-29 07:28:42 ezio.melotti set nosy: + ezio.melottimessages: +
2012-08-29 06:43:47 chris.jerdonek set nosy: + chris.jerdonek
2012-08-29 06:20:48 ncoghlan set messages: +
2012-08-29 06:06:15 rhettinger set messages: +
2012-08-29 05:55:37 alex set messages: +
2012-08-29 05:35:27 rhettinger set messages: +
2012-08-29 05:17:50 alex set nosy: + alex
2012-08-29 05:15:14 rhettinger create