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Re: Context Manager getting str instead of AttributeError instance

Started byIan Kelly <ian.g.kelly@gmail.com>
First post2012-03-15 13:49 -0600
Last post2012-03-15 13:49 -0600
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  Re: Context Manager getting str instead of AttributeError instance Ian Kelly <ian.g.kelly@gmail.com> - 2012-03-15 13:49 -0600

#21708 — Re: Context Manager getting str instead of AttributeError instance

FromIan Kelly <ian.g.kelly@gmail.com>
Date2012-03-15 13:49 -0600
SubjectRe: Context Manager getting str instead of AttributeError instance
Message-ID<mailman.698.1331840975.3037.python-list@python.org>
On Thu, Mar 15, 2012 at 1:10 PM, Prasad, Ramit
<ramit.prasad@jpmorgan.com> wrote:
>> Prasad, Ramit wrote:
>>
>> > So I have a context manager used to catch errors
>> >
>> > def __exit__( self, exceptionClass, exception, tracebackObject ):
>> >     if isinstance( exception, self.exceptionClasses ):
>> >          #do something here
>> >
>> > Normally exception would be the exception instance, but for
>> > AttributeError it seems to be a string instead.
>>
>> I don't think so:
>>
>> >>> class A(object):
>> ...     def __enter__(self): return self
>> ...     def __exit__(self, *args): print args
>> ...
>> >>> with A() as a:
>> ...     a.x
>> ...
>> (<type 'exceptions.AttributeError'>, AttributeError("'A' object has no
>> attribute 'x'",), <traceback object at 0x7f57b70f22d8>)
>> Traceback (most recent call last):
>>   File "<stdin>", line 2, in <module>
>> AttributeError: 'A' object has no attribute 'x'
>>
>> > 1) Why is AttributeError different than the other built-ins
>> > in this respect?
>> > 2) Are there other standard errors like this (I know
>> > that SystemExit is different as well)?
>> > 3) Taking into account that I want to include subclasses of
>> > classes listed in self.exceptionClasses, Is there a better check I can
>> > use?
>
> Not sure why mine behaves differently:
> Python 2.6.6 (r266:84292, Dec 17 2010, 12:36:53) [MSC v.1500 32 bit (Intel)] on win32
>>>>
>>>> class A(object):
> ...     def __enter__(self): return self
> ...     def __exit__(self, *args): print args
> ...
>>>> with A() as a:
> ...     a.x
> ...
> (<type 'exceptions.AttributeError'>, "'A' object has no attribute 'x'", <traceback object at 0x1817F648>)
> AttributeError: 'A' object has no attribute 'x'
>
> As you can see, I am getting a string while you are not.

Looks like a version difference.  I don't have Python 2.6 handy to
test on, but I get a str in Python 2.5 and an AttributeError instance
in Python 2.7.

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