Am 20.01.2012 21:05, schrieb Ethan Furman: > Benjamin Peterson wrote: >> 2012/1/20 Ethan Furman <ethan at stoneleaf.us>: >>> Summary: >>> >>> Exception Chaining is cool, unless you are writing libraries that want to >>> transform from Exception X to Exception Y as the the previous exception >>> context is unnecessary, potentially confusing, and cluttery (yup, just made >>> that word up!). >>> >>> For all the gory details, see http://bugs.python.org/issue6210. >>> >>> I'm going to attempt a patch implementing MRAB's suggestion: >>> >>> try: >>> some_op >>> except ValueError: >>> raise as OtherError() # `raise` keeps context, `raise as` does not >> >> I dislike this syntax. Raise what as OtherError()? I think the "raise >> x from None" idea is preferable, since it indicates you are nulling >> the context. The optimal solution would be to have "raise X >> nocontext", but that would obviously require another keyword... > > Raise 'the error' as OtherError. > > The problem I have with 'raise x from None' is it puts 'from None' clear > at the end of line -- not a big deal on this very short example, but > when you have actual text it's not as obvious: Well, the "as" in "raise as" would be very easily overlooked too. > except SomeError(): > raise SomeOtherError('explanatory text with actual %data to help > track down the problem' % data) from None In any case, I don't think the context suppression is the most important thing about the exception raising, so it doesn't need to stand out... Georg
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