Struct cpython::PyErr [] [src]

pub struct PyErr {
    pub ptype: PyObject,
    pub pvalue: Option<PyObject>,
    pub ptraceback: Option<PyObject>,
}

Represents a Python exception that was raised.

Fields

ptype: PyObject

The type of the exception. This should be either a PyClass or a PyType.

pvalue: Option<PyObject>

The value of the exception.

This can be either an instance of ptype, a tuple of arguments to be passed to ptype's constructor, or a single argument to be passed to ptype's constructor. Call PyErr::instance() to get the exception instance in all cases.

ptraceback: Option<PyObject>

The PyTraceBack object associated with the error.

Methods

impl PyErr
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fn occurred(_: Python) -> bool

Gets whether an error is present in the Python interpreter's global state.

fn fetch(py: Python) -> PyErr

Retrieves the current error from the Python interpreter's global state. The error is cleared from the Python interpreter. If no error is set, returns a SystemError.

fn new<T, V>(py: Python, value: V) -> PyErr where T: PythonObjectWithTypeObject, V: ToPyObject

Creates a new PyErr of type T.

value can be: * NoArgs: the exception instance will be created using python T() * a tuple: the exception instance will be created using python T(*tuple) * any other value: the exception instance will be created using python T(value)

Panics if T is not a python class derived from BaseException.

fn from_instance<O>(py: Python, obj: O) -> PyErr where O: PythonObject

Creates a new PyErr.

obj must be an Python exception instance, the PyErr will use that instance. If obj is a Python exception type object, the PyErr will (lazily) create a new instance of that type. Otherwise, a TypeError is created instead.

fn new_lazy_init(exc: PyType, value: Option<PyObject>) -> PyErr

Construct a new error, with the usual lazy initialization of Python exceptions. exc is the exception type; usually one of the standard exceptions like PyExc::runtime_error(). value is the exception instance, or a tuple of arguments to pass to the exception constructor.

fn print(self, py: Python)

Print a standard traceback to sys.stderr.

fn print_and_set_sys_last_vars(self, py: Python)

Print a standard traceback to sys.stderr.

fn matches(&self, _py: Python, exc: &PyObject) -> bool

Return true if the current exception matches the exception in exc. If exc is a class object, this also returns true when self is an instance of a subclass. If exc is a tuple, all exceptions in the tuple (and recursively in subtuples) are searched for a match.

fn normalize(&mut self, py: Python)

Normalizes the error. This ensures that the exception value is an instance of the exception type.

fn get_type(&self, py: Python) -> PyType

Retrieves the exception type.

fn instance(&mut self, py: Python) -> PyObject

Retrieves the exception instance for this error. This method takes &mut self because the error might need to be normalized in order to create the exception instance.

fn restore(self, py: Python)

Writes the error back to the Python interpreter's global state. This is the opposite of PyErr::fetch().

fn warn(py: Python, category: &PyObject, message: &str, stacklevel: i32) -> PyResult<()>

Issue a warning message. May return a PyErr if warnings-as-errors is enabled.

Trait Implementations

impl Debug for PyErr
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fn fmt(&self, __arg_0: &mut Formatter) -> Result

Formats the value using the given formatter.

impl<'p> From<PythonObjectDowncastError<'p>> for PyErr
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Converts PythonObjectDowncastError to Python TypeError.

fn from(err: PythonObjectDowncastError<'p>) -> PyErr

Performs the conversion.