May 2001
Intermediate to advanced
304 pages
6h 12m
English
The traceback module in Example 2-18 allows you to print exception tracebacks inside your
programs, just like the interpreter does when you don’t catch an
exception yourself.
Example 2-18. Using the traceback Module to Print a Traceback
File: traceback-example-1.py
# note! importing the traceback module messes up the
# exception state, so you better do that here and not
# in the exception handler
import traceback
try:
raise SyntaxError, "example"
except:
traceback.print_exc()
Traceback (innermost last):
File "traceback-example-1.py", line 7, in ?
SyntaxError: exampleExample 2-19 uses the StringIO
module to put the traceback in a string.
Example 2-19. Using the traceback Module to Copy a Traceback to a String
File: traceback-example-2.py
import traceback
import StringIO
try:
raise IOError, "an i/o error occurred"
except:
fp = StringIO.StringIO()
traceback.print_exc(file=fp)
message = fp.getvalue()
print "failure! the error was:", repr(message)
failure! the error was: 'Traceback (innermost last):\012 File
"traceback-example-2.py", line 5, in ?\012IOError: an i/o error
occurred\012'
To format the traceback in a nonstandard way, use
the extract_tb function to convert a traceback
object to a list of stack entries, as Example 2-20 demonstrates.
Example 2-20. Using the traceback Module to Decode a Traceback Object
File: traceback-example-3.py import traceback import sys def function(): raise IOError, "an i/o error occurred" try: function() except: info = sys.exc_info() ...
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