On Mon, Oct 15, 2018 at 1:12 PM Karsten Hilbert <karsten.hilb...@gmx.net> wrote: > > On Mon, Oct 15, 2018 at 12:48:04PM +0100, Daniele Varrazzo wrote: > > > - the new 'errors' module. About it I have a doubt: we convert > > postgres error messages [2] from lower_case to CamelCase because the > > latter is the convention for Python class, but maybe leaving as they > > are makes more sense? Easier to google for them or grep for them in > > the postgres sources maybe? > > Since there is no Right or Wrong here, the "best" option > might be to offer both: > > Raise whatever is Right for Python (that is, CamelCase) > > raise PostgresSpecificError > > but support catching lower case, too: > > class postgres_specific_error(PostgresSpecificError): > pass > > try: > something() > except postgres_specific_error: > print('lower case') > > For the lower case one I would exactly copy what's used by > PostgreSQL itself. > > Make sense ?
I think it's responsible to make a decision. Having two names to refer to a thing is confusing. One of the two would be the "blessed" one - the one appearing in the tracebacks. And if a traceback says that 'unique_violation' was raised, it would be weird to solve it by writing a handler for 'UniqueViolation'. Plus, that module defines already 232 classes (as of Postgres 11): I wouldn't like doubling their number. I'm pondering whether to write it as a C module instead of Python but I'm not overly fussed by that. So I'd say lower_case or CamelCase, not both. -- Daniele