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25.3 General raise Statement FormsWith the addition of class-based exceptions, the raise statement can take the following five forms: the first two raise string exceptions, the next two raise class exceptions, and the last reraises the current exception (useful if you need to propagate an arbitrary exception). raise string # Matches except with same string object raise string, data # Pass optional extra data (default=None). raise instance # Same as: raise instance.__class__ instance. raise class, instance # Matches except with this class or its superclass raise # Reraise the current exception. For class-based exceptions, Python always requires an instance of the class. Raising an instance really raises the instance's class; the instance is passed along with the class as the extra data item (it's a good place to store information for the handler). For backward compatibility with Python versions in which built-in exceptions were strings, you can also use these forms of the raise statement: raise class # Same as: raise class( ) raise class, arg # Same as: raise class(arg) raise class, (arg, arg,...) # Same as: raise class(arg, arg,...) These are all the same as saying raise class(arg...), and therefore the same as the raise instance form above. Specifically, if you list a class instead of an instance, and the extra data item is not an instance of the class listed, Python automatically calls the class with the extra data items as constructor arguments to create and raise an instance for you. For example, you may raise an instance of the built-in KeyError exception by saying simply raise KeyError, even though KeyError is now a class; Python calls KeyError to make an instance along the way. In fact, you can raise KeyError, and any other class-based exception, in a variety of ways: raise KeyError( ) # Normal: raise an instance raise KeyError, KeyError( ) # Class, instance: uses instance raise KeyError # Class: instance will be generated raise KeyError, "bad spam" # Class, arg: instance is generated For all of these raise forms, a try statement of the form: try: ... except KeyError, X: ... assigns X to the KeyError instance raised. If that sounds confusing, just remember that exceptions may be identified by string or class instance objects. For strings, you may pass extra data with the exception or not. For classes, if there is no instance object in the raise statement, Python makes an instance for you. |
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