I use a third-party library that's fine but does not handle inexistant files the way I would like. When giving it a non-existant file, instead of raising the good old
FileNotFoundError: [Errno 2] No such file or directory: 'nothing.txt'
it raises some obscure message:
OSError: Syntax error in file None (line 1)
I don't want to handle the missing file, don't want to catch nor handle the exception, don't want to raise a custom exception, neither want I to open
the file, nor to create it if it does not exist.
I only want to check it exists (os.path.isfile(filename)
will do the trick) and if not, then just raise a proper FileNotFoundError.
I tried this:
#!/usr/bin/env python3 import os if not os.path.isfile("nothing.txt"): raise FileNotFoundError
what only outputs:
Traceback (most recent call last): File "./test_script.py", line 6, in <module> raise FileNotFoundError FileNotFoundError
This is better than a "Syntax error in file None", but how is it possible to raise the "real" python exception with the proper message, without having to reimplement it?
FileNotFoundError is a subclass of OSError , which takes several arguments. The first is an error code from the errno module (file not found is always errno. ENOENT ), the second the error message (use os. strerror() to obtain this), and pass in the filename as the 3rd.
As a Python developer you can choose to throw an exception if a condition occurs. To throw (or raise) an exception, use the raise keyword.
The Python FileNotFoundError: [Errno 2] No such file or directory error is often raised by the os library. This error tells you that you are trying to access a file or folder that does not exist. To fix this error, check that you are referring to the right file or folder in your program.
Pass in arguments:
import errno import os raise FileNotFoundError( errno.ENOENT, os.strerror(errno.ENOENT), filename)
FileNotFoundError
is a subclass of OSError
, which takes several arguments. The first is an error code from the errno
module (file not found is always errno.ENOENT
), the second the error message (use os.strerror()
to obtain this), and pass in the filename as the 3rd.
The final string representation used in a traceback is built from those arguments:
>>> print(FileNotFoundError(errno.ENOENT, os.strerror(errno.ENOENT), 'foobar')) [Errno 2] No such file or directory: 'foobar'
If you love us? You can donate to us via Paypal or buy me a coffee so we can maintain and grow! Thank you!
Donate Us With