On Thu, Apr 9, 2015 at 7:31 PM, Palpandi <palpandi...@gmail.com> wrote: > Hi all, > > Is there any way to roll back or undo changes which are all done before > exception occurs.
In Python itself? Not directly; there are no facilities for undoing Python code. But if you're serious about integrity, you probably want to be (or already are) using a database, eg PostgreSQL, and storing data in there. In that case, you can follow a fairly straight-forward model, and one that some database connection modules even make easy for you: with dbconnection: # do stuff that might affect the database # and might throw an exception As you leave the 'with' block, Python will tell the database connection "hey, we got out without a problem", or "hey, we're leaving here because of an exception". In the first case, the database will commit, so everything you've done really happens. In the second, it'll roll back, which will undo everything perfectly. But this applies only to the database. For this to work, you have to organize your code around that; make sure that everything that matters is in the database, and local objects can't ever need to be "undone". ChrisA -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list