PEP 409 – Suppressing exception context | peps.python.org (original) (raw)

Author:

Ethan Furman

Status:

Final

Type:

Standards Track

Created:

26-Jan-2012

Python-Version:

3.3

Post-History:

30-Aug-2002, 01-Feb-2012, 03-Feb-2012

Superseded-By:

415

Resolution:

Python-Dev message


Table of Contents

Abstract

One of the open issues from PEP 3134 is suppressing context: currently there is no way to do it. This PEP proposes one.

Rationale

There are two basic ways to generate exceptions:

  1. Python does it (buggy code, missing resources, ending loops, etc.)
  2. manually (with a raise statement)

When writing libraries, or even just custom classes, it can become necessary to raise exceptions; moreover it can be useful, even necessary, to change from one exception to another. To take an example from my dbf module:

try: value = int(value) except Exception: raise DbfError(...)

Whatever the original exception was (ValueError, TypeError, or something else) is irrelevant. The exception from this point on is aDbfError, and the original exception is of no value. However, if this exception is printed, we would currently see both.

Alternatives

Several possibilities have been put forth:

All of the above options will require changes to the core.

Proposal

I propose going with the second option:

raise NewException from None

It has the advantage of using the existing pattern of explicitly setting the cause:

raise KeyError() from NameError()

but because the cause is None the previous context is not displayed by the default exception printing routines.

Implementation Discussion

Note: after acceptance of this PEP, a cleaner implementation mechanism was proposed and accepted in PEP 415. Refer to that PEP for more details on the implementation actually used in Python 3.3.

Currently, None is the default for both __context__ and __cause__. In order to support raise ... from None (which would set __cause__ toNone) we need a different default value for __cause__. Several ideas were put forth on how to implement this at the language level:

Language Details

To support raise Exception from None, __context__ will stay as it is, but __cause__ will start out as Ellipsis and will change to Nonewhen the raise Exception from None method is used.

form __context__ __cause__
raise None Ellipsis
reraise previous exception Ellipsis
reraise from None | ChainedException previous exception None | explicitly chained exception

The default exception printing routine will then:

In both of the latter cases the exception chain will stop being followed.

Because the default value for __cause__ is now Ellipsis and raise Exception from Cause is simply syntactic sugar for:

_exc = NewException() _exc.cause = Cause() raise _exc

Ellipsis, as well as None, is now allowed as a cause:

raise Exception from Ellipsis

Patches

There is a patch for CPython implementing this attached to Issue 6210.

References

Discussion and refinements in this thread on python-dev.

This document has been placed in the public domain.