On 26/09/2013 00:05, Cameron Simpson wrote: > [ I've replied to two messages here: Georg's and Glenn's (supporting MRAB's). > - Cameron > ] > > On 25Sep2013 08:22, Georg Brandl <g.brandl at gmx.net> wrote: > | Am 24.09.2013 00:11, schrieb Greg Ewing: > | > How about something like "Uncaught exception in __del__ > | > method ignored"? It explains fairly clearly what has > | > happened, and also indicates what do do about it -- > | > catch it in the __del__ method. > | > | "Exception in __del__ caught and not propagated:" > | Georg > > > On 24Sep2013 09:33, Glenn Linderman <v+python at g.nevcal.com> wrote: > | [MRAB]: > | >> Why not just say something like "Cannot propagate exception..."; it's > | >> simpler than "Unpropagatable exception...". [...] > | > | First one I've heard that accurately and unambiguously and briefly > | describes the issue. > | +1 > > I'm strongly in favour of Georg's one ("Exception in __del__ caught and not propagated"). > > Why? > > It says simply and clearly what has happened. > It denotes the relevant context (__del__) in which it happened. > The reader can then decide to find out why that decision may have been made. > > Why not MRAB's? ("Cannot propagate exception...") > > While better than "Unpropagatable exception" and "unraisable" and > "unreraisable", it has the same flaw that I think underlies Antoine's > concerns: it suggests the reason there's an error printed instead > of further propagation is a _property of the exception_. > It doesn't say it outright, but as an outsider that is definitely > what I would at first infer. > > So: a small +0.1 for "Cannot propagate exception..." > > And: a big +2 for "Exception in __del__ caught and not propagated:". > Well, my suggestion was more about eliminating the adjective+noun form; it seemed it just wasn't possible to cram the desired meaning into a single word, so it was better not to try!
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