On 11/05/2011 18:29, Andrew Berg wrote:
I'm a bit new to programming outside of shell scripts (and I'm no expert there), so I was wondering what is considered the best way to handle errors when writing a module. Do I just let exceptions go and raise custom exceptions for errors that don't trigger a standard one? Have the function/method return nothing or a default value and show an error message? I'm sure there's not a clear-cut answer, but I was just wondering what most developers would expect a module to do in certain situations.
Generally speaking, a function or method should either do what it's expected to do, returning the expected result, or raise an exception if it can't. Also, it's often clearer to distinguish between a function, which returns a result, and a procedure, which doesn't (in Python it would return None). For example, if you have a list, the functional form is: sorted(my_list) which returns a new sorted list, and the procedural form is: my_list.sort() which sorts in-place (modifying the list) and returns None. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list