This module provides a standard interface to extract, format and print stack traces of Python programs. It exactly mimics the behavior of the Python interpreter when it prints a stack trace. This is useful when you want to print stack traces under program control, such as in a “wrapper” around the interpreter.
The module uses traceback objects — this is the object type that is stored in the variables sys.exc_traceback (deprecated) and sys.last_traceback and returned as the third item from sys.exc_info().
The module defines the following functions:
This is like print_exc(limit) but returns a string instead of printing to a file.
New in version 2.4.
This simple example implements a basic read-eval-print loop, similar to (but less useful than) the standard Python interactive interpreter loop. For a more complete implementation of the interpreter loop, refer to the code module.
import sys, traceback def run_user_code(envdir): source = raw_input(">>> ") try: exec source in envdir except: print "Exception in user code:" print '-'*60 traceback.print_exc(file=sys.stdout) print '-'*60 envdir = {} while 1: run_user_code(envdir)
The following example demonstrates the different ways to print and format the exception and traceback:
import sys, traceback def lumberjack(): bright_side_of_death() def bright_side_of_death(): return tuple()[0] try: lumberjack() except IndexError: exc_type, exc_value, exc_traceback = sys.exc_info() print "*** print_tb:" traceback.print_tb(exc_traceback, limit=1, file=sys.stdout) print "*** print_exception:" traceback.print_exception(exc_type, exc_value, exc_traceback, limit=2, file=sys.stdout) print "*** print_exc:" traceback.print_exc() print "*** format_exc, first and last line:" formatted_lines = traceback.format_exc().splitlines() print formatted_lines[0] print formatted_lines[-1] print "*** format_exception:" print repr(traceback.format_exception(exc_type, exc_value, exc_traceback)) print "*** extract_tb:" print repr(traceback.extract_tb(exc_traceback)) print "*** format_tb:" print repr(traceback.format_tb(exc_traceback)) print "*** tb_lineno:", exc_traceback.tb_lineno
The output for the example would look similar to this:
*** print_tb:
File "<doctest...>", line 10, in <module>
lumberjack()
*** print_exception:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<doctest...>", line 10, in <module>
lumberjack()
File "<doctest...>", line 4, in lumberjack
bright_side_of_death()
IndexError: tuple index out of range
*** print_exc:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<doctest...>", line 10, in <module>
lumberjack()
File "<doctest...>", line 4, in lumberjack
bright_side_of_death()
IndexError: tuple index out of range
*** format_exc, first and last line:
Traceback (most recent call last):
IndexError: tuple index out of range
*** format_exception:
['Traceback (most recent call last):\n',
' File "<doctest...>", line 10, in <module>\n lumberjack()\n',
' File "<doctest...>", line 4, in lumberjack\n bright_side_of_death()\n',
' File "<doctest...>", line 7, in bright_side_of_death\n return tuple()[0]\n',
'IndexError: tuple index out of range\n']
*** extract_tb:
[('<doctest...>', 10, '<module>', 'lumberjack()'),
('<doctest...>', 4, 'lumberjack', 'bright_side_of_death()'),
('<doctest...>', 7, 'bright_side_of_death', 'return tuple()[0]')]
*** format_tb:
[' File "<doctest...>", line 10, in <module>\n lumberjack()\n',
' File "<doctest...>", line 4, in lumberjack\n bright_side_of_death()\n',
' File "<doctest...>", line 7, in bright_side_of_death\n return tuple()[0]\n']
*** tb_lineno: 10
The following example shows the different ways to print and format the stack:
>>> import traceback >>> def another_function(): ... lumberstack() ... >>> def lumberstack(): ... traceback.print_stack() ... print repr(traceback.extract_stack()) ... print repr(traceback.format_stack()) ... >>> another_function() File "<doctest>", line 10, in <module> another_function() File "<doctest>", line 3, in another_function lumberstack() File "<doctest>", line 6, in lumberstack traceback.print_stack() [('<doctest>', 10, '<module>', 'another_function()'), ('<doctest>', 3, 'another_function', 'lumberstack()'), ('<doctest>', 7, 'lumberstack', 'print repr(traceback.extract_stack())')] [' File "<doctest>", line 10, in <module>\n another_function()\n', ' File "<doctest>", line 3, in another_function\n lumberstack()\n', ' File "<doctest>", line 8, in lumberstack\n print repr(traceback.format_stack())\n']
This last example demonstrates the final few formatting functions:
>>> import traceback >>> traceback.format_list([('spam.py', 3, '<module>', 'spam.eggs()'), ... ('eggs.py', 42, 'eggs', 'return "bacon"')]) [' File "spam.py", line 3, in <module>\n spam.eggs()\n', ' File "eggs.py", line 42, in eggs\n return "bacon"\n'] >>> an_error = IndexError('tuple index out of range') >>> traceback.format_exception_only(type(an_error), an_error) ['IndexError: tuple index out of range\n']
27.11. __future__ — Future statement definitions
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