"Válas Péter" <[email protected]> wrote
You could write directly to sys.stderr instead of raising an error.
Or better still do both. But only at the top level of your program.
> If other programmers have to work with your code, they'll probably > find this _incredibly_ annoying. You mean there is no way to write it nicely? Or are error messages not intended to be written on screen?
You need to distinguish between error messages and exception tracebacks. The latter are intended to convey useful debugging information to developers. The former are intended to inform non tchniocal users of a problem and what, if anything they can do about it. In general you display error messages as part of handling an exception. You may well do so at the top level of your program where all hope of auto-recovering from the error has gone... You may well also raise the exception so that the debug output can go to stderr - which may well be redirected to a log file somewhere. You may even, in the error message, ask the user to email the logfile to a support desk.... But they are different things and serve different purposes. Programs with exceptions and no error messages stand a high chance of being rejected - witness the effect of the blue screen of death on early Window NT adoption... Presenting user friendly, clear information messages about errors and detailed technical information to developers keeps everyone happy (or if not actually happy - it has crashed after all! - at least sane.) -- Alan Gauld Author of the Learn to Program web site http://www.alan-g.me.uk/ _______________________________________________ Tutor maillist - [email protected] To unsubscribe or change subscription options: http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor
