530 lines
19 KiB
Plaintext
530 lines
19 KiB
Plaintext
PEP: 348
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Title: Exception Reorganization for Python 3.0
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Version: $Revision$
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Last-Modified: $Date$
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Author: Brett Cannon <brett@python.org>
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Status: Rejected
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Type: Standards Track
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Content-Type: text/x-rst
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Created: 28-Jul-2005
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Post-History:
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.. |2.x| replace:: 2.5
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.. note:: This PEP as been rejected [#rejected]_.
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Abstract
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========
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Python, as of version 2.4, has 38 exceptions (including warnings) in
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the built-in namespace in a rather shallow hierarchy. These
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classes have come about over the years without a chance to learn from
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experience. This PEP proposes doing a reorganization of the hierarchy
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for Python 3.0 when backwards-compatibility is not as much of an
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issue.
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Along with this reorganization, adding a requirement that all
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objects passed to a ``raise`` statement must inherit from a specific
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superclass is proposed. This is to have guarantees about the basic
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interface of exceptions and to further enhance the natural hierarchy
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of exceptions.
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Lastly, bare ``except`` clauses will be changed to be semantically
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equivalent to ``except Exception``. Most people currently use bare
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``except`` clause for this purpose and with the exception hierarchy
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reorganization becomes a viable default.
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Rationale For Wanting Change
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============================
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Exceptions are a critical part of Python. While exceptions are
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traditionally used to signal errors in a program, they have also grown
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to be used for flow control for things such as iterators.
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While their importance is great, there is a lack of structure to them.
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This stems from the fact that any object can be raised as an
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exception. Because of this you have no guarantee in terms of what
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kind of object will be raised, destroying any possible hierarchy
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raised objects might adhere to.
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But exceptions do have a hierarchy, showing the severity of the
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exception. The hierarchy also groups related exceptions together to
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simplify catching them in ``except`` clauses. To allow people to
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be able to rely on this hierarchy, a common superclass that all
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raise objects must inherit from is being proposed. It also allows
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guarantees about the interface to raised objects to be made (see
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PEP 344 [#PEP344]_). A discussion about all of this has occurred
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before on python-dev [#Summary2004-08-01]_.
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As bare ``except`` clauses stand now, they catch *all* exceptions.
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While this can be handy, it is rather overreaching for the common
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case. Thanks to having a required superclass, catching all
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exceptions is as easy as catching just one specific exception.
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This allows bare ``except`` clauses to be used for a more useful
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purpose.
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Once again, this has been discussed on python-dev [#python-dev3]_.
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Finally, slight changes to the exception hierarchy will make it much
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more reasonable in terms of structure. By minor rearranging
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exceptions
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that should not typically be caught can be allowed to propagate to the
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top of the execution stack, terminating the interpreter as intended.
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Philosophy of Reorganization
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============================
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For the reorganization of the hierarchy, there was a general
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philosophy followed that developed from discussion of earlier drafts
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of this PEP [#python-dev-thread1]_, [#python-dev-thread2]_,
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[#python-dev-thread3]_, [#python-dev-thread4]_,
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[#python-dev-thread5]_, [#python-dev-thread6]_.
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First and foremost was to not break anything
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that works. This meant that renaming exceptions was out of the
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question unless the name was deemed severely bad. This
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also meant no removal of exceptions unless they were viewed as
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truly misplaced. The introduction of new exceptions were only done in
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situations where there might be a use for catching a superclass of a
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category of exceptions. Lastly, existing exceptions would have their
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inheritance tree changed only if it was felt they were truly
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misplaced to begin with.
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For all new exceptions, the proper suffix had to be chosen. For
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those that signal an error, "Error" is to be used. If the exception
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is a warning, then "Warning". "Exception" is to be used when none
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of the other suffixes are proper to use and no specific suffix is
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a better fit.
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After that it came down to choosing which exceptions should and
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should not inherit from Exception. This was for the purpose of
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making bare ``except`` clauses more useful.
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Lastly, the entire existing hierarchy had to inherit from the new
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exception meant to act as the required superclass for all exceptions
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to inherit from.
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New Hierarchy
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=============
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.. Note:: Exceptions flagged with "stricter inheritance" will no
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longer inherit from a certain class. A "broader inheritance" flag
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means a class has been added to the exception's inheritance tree.
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All comparisons are against the Python 2.4 exception hierarchy.
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.. parsed-literal::
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+-- BaseException (new; broader inheritance for subclasses)
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+-- Exception
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+-- GeneratorExit (defined in PEP 342 [#PEP342]_)
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+-- StandardError
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+-- ArithmeticError
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+-- DivideByZeroError
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+-- FloatingPointError
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+-- OverflowError
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+-- AssertionError
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+-- AttributeError
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+-- EnvironmentError
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+-- IOError
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+-- EOFError
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+-- OSError
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+-- ImportError
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+-- LookupError
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+-- IndexError
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+-- KeyError
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+-- MemoryError
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+-- NameError
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+-- UnboundLocalError
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+-- NotImplementedError (stricter inheritance)
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+-- SyntaxError
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+-- IndentationError
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+-- TabError
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+-- TypeError
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+-- RuntimeError
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+-- UnicodeError
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+-- UnicodeDecodeError
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+-- UnicodeEncodeError
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+-- UnicodeTranslateError
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+-- ValueError
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+-- ReferenceError
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+-- StopIteration
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+-- SystemError
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+-- Warning
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+-- DeprecationWarning
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+-- FutureWarning
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+-- PendingDeprecationWarning
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+-- RuntimeWarning
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+-- SyntaxWarning
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+-- UserWarning
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+ -- WindowsError
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+-- KeyboardInterrupt (stricter inheritance)
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+-- SystemExit (stricter inheritance)
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Differences Compared to Python 2.4
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==================================
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A more thorough explanation of terms is needed when discussing
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inheritance changes. Inheritance changes result in either broader or
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more restrictive inheritance. "Broader" is when a class has an
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inheritance tree like ``cls, A`` and then becomes ``cls, B, A``.
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"Stricter" is the reverse.
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BaseException
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-------------
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The superclass that all exceptions must inherit from. It's name was
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chosen to reflect that it is at the base of the exception hierarchy
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while being an exception itself. "Raisable" was considered as a name,
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it was passed on because its name did not properly reflect the fact
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that it is an exception itself.
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Direct inheritance of BaseException is not expected, and will
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be discouraged for the general case. Most user-defined
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exceptions should inherit from Exception instead. This allows
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catching Exception to continue to work in the common case of catching
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all exceptions that should be caught. Direct inheritance of
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BaseException should only be done in cases where an entirely new
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category of exception is desired.
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But, for cases where all
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exceptions should be caught blindly, ``except BaseException`` will
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work.
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KeyboardInterrupt and SystemExit
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--------------------------------
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Both exceptions are no longer under Exception. This is to allow bare
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``except`` clauses to act as a more viable default case by catching
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exceptions that inherit from Exception. With both KeyboardInterrupt
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and SystemExit acting as signals that the interpreter is expected to
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exit, catching them in the common case is the wrong semantics.
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NotImplementedError
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-------------------
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Inherits from Exception instead of from RuntimeError.
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Originally inheriting from RuntimeError, NotImplementedError does not
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have any direct relation to the exception meant for use in user code
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as a quick-and-dirty exception. Thus it now directly inherits from
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Exception.
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Required Superclass for ``raise``
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=================================
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By requiring all objects passed to a ``raise`` statement to inherit
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from a specific superclass, all exceptions are guaranteed to have
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certain attributes. If PEP 344 [#PEP344]_ is accepted, the attributes
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outlined there will be guaranteed to be on all exceptions raised.
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This should help facilitate debugging by making the querying of
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information from exceptions much easier.
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The proposed hierarchy has BaseException as the required base class.
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Implementation
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--------------
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Enforcement is straightforward. Modifying ``RAISE_VARARGS`` to do an
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inheritance check first before raising an exception should be enough.
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For the C API, all functions that set an exception will have the same
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inheritance check applied.
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Bare ``except`` Clauses Catch Exception
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=======================================
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In most existing Python 2.4 code, bare ``except`` clauses are too
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broad in the exceptions they catch. Typically only exceptions that
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signal an error are desired to be caught. This means that exceptions
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that are used to signify that the interpreter should exit should not
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be caught in the common case.
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With KeyboardInterrupt and SystemExit moved to inherit from
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BaseException instead of Exception, changing bare ``except`` clauses
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to act as ``except Exception`` becomes a much more reasonable
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default. This change also will break very little code since these
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semantics are what most people want for bare ``except`` clauses.
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The complete removal of bare ``except`` clauses has been argued for.
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The case has been made that they violate both Only One Way To Do It
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(OOWTDI) and Explicit Is Better Than Implicit (EIBTI) as listed in the
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Zen of Python [#zen]_. But Practicality Beats Purity (PBP), also in
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the Zen of Python, trumps both of these in this case. The BDFL has
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stated that bare ``except`` clauses will work this way
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[#python-dev8]_.
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Implementation
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--------------
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The compiler will emit the bytecode for ``except Exception`` whenever
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a bare ``except`` clause is reached.
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Transition Plan
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===============
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Because of the complexity and clutter that would be required to add
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all features planned in this PEP, the transition plan is very simple.
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In Python |2.x| BaseException is added. In Python 3.0, all remaining
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features (required superclass, change in inheritance, bare ``except``
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clauses becoming the same as ``except Exception``) will go into
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affect. In order to make all of this work in a backwards-compatible
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way in Python |2.x| would require very deep hacks in the exception
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machinery which could be error-prone and lead to a slowdown in
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performance for little benefit.
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To help with the transition, the documentation will be changed to
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reflect several programming guidelines:
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- When one wants to catch *all* exceptions, catch BaseException
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- To catch all exceptions that do not represent the termination of
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the interpreter, catch Exception explicitly
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- Explicitly catch KeyboardInterrupt and SystemExit; don't rely on
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inheritance from Exception to lead to the capture
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- Always catch NotImplementedError explicitly instead of relying on
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the inheritance from RuntimeError
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The documentation for the 'exceptions' module [#exceptions-stdlib]_,
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tutorial [#tutorial]_, and PEP 290 [#PEP290]_ will all require
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updating.
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Rejected Ideas
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==============
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DeprecationWarning Inheriting From PendingDeprecationWarning
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------------------------------------------------------------
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This was originally proposed because a DeprecationWarning can be
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viewed as a PendingDeprecationWarning that is being removed in the
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next version. But since enough people thought the inheritance could
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logically work the other way around, the idea was dropped.
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AttributeError Inheriting From TypeError or NameError
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-----------------------------------------------------
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Viewing attributes as part of the interface of a type caused the idea
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of inheriting from TypeError. But that partially defeats the thinking
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of duck typing and thus the idea was dropped.
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Inheriting from NameError was suggested because objects can be viewed
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as having their own namespace where the attributes live and when an
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attribute is not found it is a namespace failure. This was also
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dropped as a possibility since not everyone shared this view.
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Removal of EnvironmentError
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---------------------------
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Originally proposed based on the idea that EnvironmentError was an
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unneeded distinction, the BDFL overruled this idea [#python-dev4]_.
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Introduction of MacError and UnixError
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--------------------------------------
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Proposed to add symmetry to WindowsError, the BDFL said they won't be
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used enough [#python-dev4]_. The idea of then removing WindowsError
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was proposed and accepted as reasonable, thus completely negating the
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idea of adding these exceptions.
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SystemError Subclassing SystemExit
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----------------------------------
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Proposed because a SystemError is meant to lead to a system exit, the
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idea was removed since CriticalError indicates this better.
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ControlFlowException Under Exception
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------------------------------------
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It has been suggested that ControlFlowException should inherit from
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Exception. This idea has been rejected based on the thinking that
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control flow exceptions typically do not all need to be caught by a
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single ``except`` clause.
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Rename NameError to NamespaceError
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----------------------------------
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NameError is considered more succinct and leaves open no possible
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mistyping of
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the capitalization of "Namespace" [#python-dev5]_.
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Renaming RuntimeError or Introducing SimpleError
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''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''
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The thinking was that RuntimeError was in no way an obvious name for
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an exception meant to be used when a situation did not call for the
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creation of a new exception. The renaming was rejected on the basis
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that the exception is already used throughout the interpreter
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[#python-dev6]_.
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Rejection of SimpleError was founded on the thought that people
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should be free to use whatever exception they choose and not have one
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so blatently suggested [#python-dev7]_.
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Renaming Existing Exceptions
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----------------------------
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Various renamings were suggested but non garnered more than a +0 vote
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(renaming ReferenceError to WeakReferenceError). The thinking was
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that the existing names were fine and no one had actively complained
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about them ever. To minimize backwards-compatibility issues and
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causing existing Python programmers extra pain, the renamings were
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removed.
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Have EOFError Subclass IOError
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------------------------------
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The original thought was that since EOFError deals directly with I/O,
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it should
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subclass IOError. But since EOFError is used more as a signal that an
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event
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has occurred (the exhaustion of an I/O port), it should not subclass
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such a specific error exception.
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Have MemoryError and SystemError Have a Common Superclass
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---------------------------------------------------------
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Both classes deal with the interpreter, so why not have them have a
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common
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superclass? Because one of them means that the interpreter is in a
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state that it should not recover from while the other does not.
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Common Superclass for PendingDeprecationWarning and DeprecationWarning
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----------------------------------------------------------------------
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Grouping the deprecation warning exceptions together makes intuitive
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sense.
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But this sensical idea does not extend well when one considers how
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rarely either warning is used, let along at the same time.
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Removing WindowsError
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---------------------
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Originally proposed based on the idea that having such a
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platform-specific exception should not be in the built-in namespace.
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It turns out, though, enough code exists that uses the exception to
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warrant it staying.
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Superclass for KeyboardInterrupt and SystemExit
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-----------------------------------------------
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Proposed to make catching non-Exception inheriting exceptions easier
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along with easing the transition to the new hierarchy, the idea was
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rejected by the BDFL [#python-dev8]_. The argument that existing
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code did not show enough instances of the pair of exceptions being
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caught and thus did not justify cluttering the built-in namespace
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was used.
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Acknowledgements
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================
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Thanks to Robert Brewer, Josiah Carlson, Nick Coghlan, Timothy
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Delaney, Jack Diedrich, Fred L. Drake, Jr., Philip J. Eby, Greg Ewing,
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James Y. Knight, MA Lemburg, Guido van Rossum, Stephen J. Turnbull,
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Raymond Hettinger, and everyone else I missed for participating in the
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discussion.
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References
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==========
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.. [#PEP342] PEP 342 (Coroutines via Enhanced Generators)
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http://www.python.org/peps/pep-0342.html
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.. [#PEP344] PEP 344 (Exception Chaining and Embedded Tracebacks)
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http://www.python.org/peps/pep-0344.html
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.. [#PEP290] PEP 290 (Code Migration and Modernization)
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http://www.python.org/peps/pep-0290.html
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.. [#Summary2004-08-01] python-dev Summary (An exception is an
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exception, unless it doesn't inherit from Exception)
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http://www.python.org/dev/summary/2004-08-01_2004-08-15.html#an-exception-is-an-exception-unless-it-doesn-t-inherit-from-exception
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.. [#python-dev3] python-dev email (PEP, take 2: Exception
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Reorganization for Python 3.0)
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http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2005-August/055116.html
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.. [#exceptions-stdlib] exceptions module
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http://docs.python.org/library/exceptions.html
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.. [#python-dev-thread1] python-dev thread (Pre-PEP: Exception
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Reorganization for Python 3.0)
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http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2005-July/055020.html,
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http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2005-August/055065.html
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.. [#python-dev-thread2] python-dev thread (PEP, take 2: Exception
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Reorganization for Python 3.0)
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http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2005-August/055103.html
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.. [#python-dev-thread3] python-dev thread (Reorg PEP checked in)
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http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2005-August/055138.html
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.. [#python-dev-thread4] python-dev thread (Major revision of PEP 348 committed)
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http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2005-August/055199.html
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.. [#python-dev-thread5] python-dev thread (Exception Reorg PEP revised yet again)
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http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2005-August/055292.html
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.. [#python-dev-thread6] python-dev thread (PEP 348 (exception reorg) revised again)
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http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2005-August/055412.html
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||
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.. [#python-dev4] python-dev email (Pre-PEP: Exception Reorganization
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for Python 3.0)
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http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2005-July/055019.html
|
||
|
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.. [#python-dev5] python-dev email (PEP, take 2: Exception Reorganization for
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Python 3.0)
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http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2005-August/055159.html
|
||
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.. [#python-dev6] python-dev email (Exception Reorg PEP checked in)
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http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2005-August/055149.html
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||
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.. [#python-dev7] python-dev email (Exception Reorg PEP checked in)
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||
http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2005-August/055175.html
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||
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.. [#python-dev8] python-dev email (PEP 348 (exception reorg) revised again)
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||
http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2005-August/055423.html
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.. [#zen] PEP 20 (The Zen of Python)
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http://www.python.org/peps/pep-0020.html
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.. [#tutorial] Python Tutorial
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http://docs.python.org/tutorial/
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.. [#rejected] python-dev email (Bare except clauses in PEP 348)
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http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2005-August/055676.html
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Copyright
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=========
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This document has been placed in the public domain.
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..
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Local Variables:
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mode: indented-text
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indent-tabs-mode: nil
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sentence-end-double-space: t
|
||
fill-column: 70
|
||
End:
|