On Thu, Apr 19, 2018 at 11:00 AM, Skip Montanaro <skip.montan...@gmail.com> wrote: > This session is from Python 3.6.5 on Linux: > >>>> import logging >>>> log = logging.getLogger() >>>> log.level > 30 >>>> logging.WARN > 30 >>>> log.warn("Awk! Goodbye...") > Awk! Goodbye... >>>> log.level = logging.INFO >>>> log.info("Awk! Goodbye...") >>>> log.level > 20 >>>> log.level == logging.INFO > True >>>> log.setLevel(logging.INFO) >>>> log.info("Awk! Goodbye...") >>>> log.isEnabledFor(logging.INFO) > True > > Why do the two log.info(...) calls not produce output on stderr when > the level has clearly been set to logging.INFO? There is an active > stream handler as demonstrated by the successful log.warn(...) call. > > I really don't like the logging module, but it looks like I'm stuck > with it. Why aren't simple/obvious things either simple or obvious?
I've no idea what setting log.level does; I would normally use logging.basicConfig to set that sort of thing. logging.basicConfig(level=logging.INFO) ChrisA -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list