On Sat, 04 Mar 2006 13:19:29 -0800, James Stroud wrote: > Why catch an error only to re-raise it?
As a general tactic, you may want to catch an exception, print extra debugging information, then raise the exception again, like this: try: x = somedata() y = someotherdata() z = process(x, y) except Exception: print "Error!" print "Value of x: %s" % x print "Value of y: %s" % y raise Although that's not the reason the Original Poster is doing this. The OP is doing it because catching all exceptions masks bugs. There are certain exceptions which should be allowed through, as they indicate a bug in the OP's code. Normally the tactic is to catch only the exceptions you are interested in, and let everything else through, but the OP needs to catch all exceptions because there are rare exceptions which he can't predict in advance. -- Steven. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list