On May 7, 1:19 pm, Pierre GM wrote:
> On May 7, 5:32 am, Lie Ryan wrote:
>
>
>
> > Pierre GM wrote:
> > > All,
> > > I need to log messages to both the console and a given file. I use the
> > > following code (on Python 2.5)
>
> > import logging
> > #
> > logging.basicConfig(level=
>
>
> > > So far so good, but I'd like to record (possibly unhandled) exceptions
> > > in the logfile.
> > > * Do I need to explicitly trap every single exception ?
> > > * In that case, won't I get 2 log messages on the console (as
> > > illustrated in the code below:
>
Check out sys.excepthook,
On May 7, 5:32 am, Lie Ryan wrote:
> Pierre GM wrote:
> > All,
> > I need to log messages to both the console and a given file. I use the
> > following code (on Python 2.5)
>
> import logging
> #
> logging.basicConfig(level=logging.DEBUG,)
> logfile = logging.FileHandler('log.l
Pierre GM wrote:
All,
I need to log messages to both the console and a given file. I use the
following code (on Python 2.5)
import logging
#
logging.basicConfig(level=logging.DEBUG,)
logfile = logging.FileHandler('log.log')
logfile.setLevel(level=logging.INFO)
logging.getLogger('').addHandler(l
In message <597627b8-
d30b-4b74-9202-9cd46fb1d...@s28g2000vbp.googlegroups.com>, Pierre GM wrote:
> ... I'd like to record (possibly unhandled) exceptions in the logfile.
python myscript.py 2>error.log
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
All,
I need to log messages to both the console and a given file. I use the
following code (on Python 2.5)
>>> import logging
>>> #
>>> logging.basicConfig(level=logging.DEBUG,)
>>> logfile = logging.FileHandler('log.log')
>>> logfile.setLevel(level=logging.INFO)
>>> logging.getLogger('').addHandl