Patch #1515343: Fix printing of deprecated string exceptions with a

value in the traceback module.
This commit is contained in:
Georg Brandl 2006-07-24 14:09:56 +00:00
parent 844f7ddcdc
commit c13c34c39d
3 changed files with 93 additions and 46 deletions

View File

@ -31,8 +31,9 @@ class TracebackCases(unittest.TestCase):
err = self.get_exception_format(self.syntax_error_with_caret,
SyntaxError)
self.assert_(len(err) == 4)
self.assert_("^" in err[2]) # third line has caret
self.assert_(err[1].strip() == "return x!")
self.assert_("^" in err[2]) # third line has caret
self.assert_(err[1].find("!") == err[2].find("^")) # in the right place
def test_nocaret(self):
if is_jython:
@ -47,8 +48,9 @@ class TracebackCases(unittest.TestCase):
err = self.get_exception_format(self.syntax_error_bad_indentation,
IndentationError)
self.assert_(len(err) == 4)
self.assert_("^" in err[2])
self.assert_(err[1].strip() == "print 2")
self.assert_("^" in err[2])
self.assert_(err[1].find("2") == err[2].find("^"))
def test_bug737473(self):
import sys, os, tempfile, time
@ -109,6 +111,36 @@ def test():
lst = traceback.format_exception_only(e.__class__, e)
self.assertEqual(lst, ['KeyboardInterrupt\n'])
# String exceptions are deprecated, but legal. The quirky form with
# separate "type" and "value" tends to break things, because
# not isinstance(value, type)
# and a string cannot be the first argument to issubclass.
#
# Note that sys.last_type and sys.last_value do not get set if an
# exception is caught, so we sort of cheat and just emulate them.
#
# test_string_exception1 is equivalent to
#
# >>> raise "String Exception"
#
# test_string_exception2 is equivalent to
#
# >>> raise "String Exception", "String Value"
#
def test_string_exception1(self):
str_type = "String Exception"
err = traceback.format_exception_only(str_type, None)
self.assert_(len(err) == 1)
self.assert_(err[0] == str_type + '\n')
def test_string_exception2(self):
str_type = "String Exception"
str_value = "String Value"
err = traceback.format_exception_only(str_type, str_value)
self.assert_(len(err) == 1)
self.assert_(err[0] == str_type + ': ' + str_value + '\n')
def test_main():
run_unittest(TracebackCases)

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@ -150,51 +150,63 @@ def format_exception_only(etype, value):
The arguments are the exception type and value such as given by
sys.last_type and sys.last_value. The return value is a list of
strings, each ending in a newline. Normally, the list contains a
single string; however, for SyntaxError exceptions, it contains
several lines that (when printed) display detailed information
about where the syntax error occurred. The message indicating
which exception occurred is the always last string in the list.
"""
list = []
if (type(etype) == types.ClassType
or (isinstance(etype, type) and issubclass(etype, BaseException))):
stype = etype.__name__
else:
stype = etype
if value is None:
list.append(str(stype) + '\n')
else:
if issubclass(etype, SyntaxError):
try:
msg, (filename, lineno, offset, line) = value
except:
pass
else:
if not filename: filename = "<string>"
list.append(' File "%s", line %d\n' %
(filename, lineno))
if line is not None:
i = 0
while i < len(line) and line[i].isspace():
i = i+1
list.append(' %s\n' % line.strip())
if offset is not None:
s = ' '
for c in line[i:offset-1]:
if c.isspace():
s = s + c
else:
s = s + ' '
list.append('%s^\n' % s)
value = msg
s = _some_str(value)
if s:
list.append('%s: %s\n' % (str(stype), s))
else:
list.append('%s\n' % str(stype))
return list
strings, each ending in a newline.
Normally, the list contains a single string; however, for
SyntaxError exceptions, it contains several lines that (when
printed) display detailed information about where the syntax
error occurred.
The message indicating which exception occurred is always the last
string in the list.
"""
# An instance should not have a meaningful value parameter, but
# sometimes does, particularly for string exceptions, such as
# >>> raise string1, string2 # deprecated
#
# Clear these out first because issubtype(string1, SyntaxError)
# would throw another exception and mask the original problem.
if (isinstance(etype, BaseException) or
isinstance(etype, types.InstanceType) or
type(etype) is str):
return [_format_final_exc_line(etype, value)]
stype = etype.__name__
if not issubclass(etype, SyntaxError):
return [_format_final_exc_line(stype, value)]
# It was a syntax error; show exactly where the problem was found.
try:
msg, (filename, lineno, offset, badline) = value
except Exception:
pass
else:
filename = filename or "<string>"
lines = [(' File "%s", line %d\n' % (filename, lineno))]
if badline is not None:
lines.append(' %s\n' % badline.strip())
if offset is not None:
caretspace = badline[:offset].lstrip()
# non-space whitespace (likes tabs) must be kept for alignment
caretspace = ((c.isspace() and c or ' ') for c in caretspace)
# only three spaces to account for offset1 == pos 0
lines.append(' %s^\n' % ''.join(caretspace))
value = msg
lines.append(_format_final_exc_line(stype, value))
return lines
def _format_final_exc_line(etype, value):
"""Return a list of a single line -- normal case for format_exception_only"""
if value is None or not str(value):
line = "%s\n" % etype
else:
line = "%s: %s\n" % (etype, _some_str(value))
return line
def _some_str(value):
try:
return str(value)

View File

@ -39,6 +39,9 @@ Core and builtins
Library
-------
- Patch #1515343: Fix printing of deprecated string exceptions with a
value in the traceback module.
- Resync optparse with Optik 1.5.3: minor tweaks for/to tests.
- Patch #1524429: Use repr() instead of backticks in Tkinter again.