On Fri, 29 Jul 2016 11:15 pm, BartC wrote: > On 29/07/2016 12:14, D'Arcy J.M. Cain wrote: >> On Fri, 29 Jul 2016 10:58:35 +0200 >> Antoon Pardon <antoon.par...@rece.vub.ac.be> wrote: >>> As BartC already mentions it happens fairly often during debugging. >>> Something like. >>> >>> try: >>> Some code >>> except Some_Exception: >>> # Commented code for when I am debugging <Some code> >>> pass >> >> I realize that that's a simplified example but really, isn't this just >> as easy? >> >> try: >> Some code >> # except Some_Exception: >> # Commented code for when I am debugging <Some code> > > Will it behave the same way when there is a Some_Exception exception?
Of course it won't, which is why I don't believe all these folks who claim that they regularly ("all the time", "fairly often") replace except blocks with `pass`. I call shenanigans -- perhaps you do it *occasionally*, but as a general rule, you can rarely replace the exception handler with a do-nothing clause and expect your code to work: try: block except SomeException: handle error process If you remove the error handling block, replacing it with `pass`, in general your code will just break again as soon as it continues processing. -- Steven “Cheer up,” they said, “things could be worse.” So I cheered up, and sure enough, things got worse. -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list