Exceptions Exercise
This is a little exercise that shows you how to handle exceptions in a way that mirrors actual development.
Procedure
Here are two files that you should be in the github classroom repo:
Run except_exercise.py
:
$ python except_exercise.py
(or run except_exercise.py
in iPython)
You will find that it crashes with an exception.
Your job is to write the proper exception handler in the
except_exercise.py
file, so that the code can run.
It will then crash again.
You will then need to handle the next exception.
There are instructions in the except_exercise.py
file telling you want you want to achieve.
This is simulating writing code that is using another library – your code is except_exercise.py
and except_test.py
is the other library. So you don’t want to alter except_test.py
– only change the except_exercise.py
file.
Hint: the exceptions themselves usually come from the other file, so you will get a traceback like this:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
NameError Traceback (most recent call last)
~/PythonStuff/UWPCE/Temp/except_exercise.py in <module>()
15 first_try = ['spam', 'cheese', 'mr death']
16
---> 17 joke = fun(first_try[0])
18
19
~/PythonStuff/UWPCE/Temp/except_test.py in fun(reaper)
13 def fun(reaper):
14 if reaper == 'spam':
---> 15 print(s)
16 elif reaper == 'cheese':
17 print()
NameError: name 's' is not defined
The NameError
is coming from line 15 of except_test.py
. But this is not your code! So you need to look higher up in the traceback to see where in your code the exception is triggered. That is where you put your try--except
block.
In this case, that’s line 17 of except_exercise.py
. In real life, it can be higher up in a much deeper stack trace – but keep looking ‘till you see your code.
Results
When you are done, running except_exercise.py
should result in output something like this:
Spam, Spam, Spam, Spam, Beautiful Spam
Customer: Not much of a cheese shop really, is it?
Shopkeeper: Finest in the district, sir.
Customer: And what leads you to that conclusion?
Shopkeeper: Well, it's so clean.
Customer: It's certainly uncontaminated by cheese.
Why are you doing this?
This is a kind of silly exercise, but in real life, this is a common work flow – you call a library, and find that in certain circumstances it raises an exception. As the code in the library is out of your hands, you need to decide how to handle that exception in your code instead.