On Mon, Apr 20, 2009 at 1:36 PM, Jesse Aldridge <jessealdri...@gmail.com> wrote: > from my_paths import * > > def get_selected_paths(): > return [home, desktop, project1, project2] > > ------- > > So I have a function like this which returns a list containing a bunch > of variables. The real list has around 50 entries. Occasionally I'll > remove a variable from my_paths and cause get_selected_paths to throw > a NameError. For example, say I delete the "project1" variable from > my_paths; now I'll get a NameError when I call get_selected_paths. > So everything that depends on the get_selected_paths function is > crashing. I am wondering if there is an easy way to just ignore the > variable if it's not found. So, in the example case I would want to > somehow handle the exception in a way that I end up returning just > [home, desktop, project2]. > Yes, I realize there are a number of ways to reimplement this, but I'm > wanting to get it working with minimal changes to the code. Any > suggestions?
def get_selected_paths(): variables = "home desktop project1 project2".split() vals = [] for var in variables: try: vals.append(getattr(my_paths, var)) except AttributeError: pass return vals -- I have a blog: http://blog.rebertia.com -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list