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Fix showing SystemExit exception raise inside except handler (#14503)...
Fix showing SystemExit exception raise inside except handler (#14503) Doing something like this: ```python try: 5 / 0 except Exception as e: raise SystemExit ``` was hitting an error inside UltraTB, creating a long traceback of its internals (which, ironically, UltraTB itself then displays correctly :-). `ListTB.get_exception_only()` calls the `ListTB.structured_traceback()` method *specifically* - even if `self` is a subclass, it won't use the subclass's method. However, the exception chaining in that method uses recursion by calling `self.structured_traceback()`, which will use a subclass's method. Tuples were added as an option there to support exception chaining, but not all of the machinery in connected classes expects a tuple. This just skips the exception chaining logic for the `etb=None` case, when we're showing the exception only. I'm not sure this is necessarily the best fix, but I didn't want to spend too much time following code around a module that's old enough to vote. Closes #12104

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encoding.py
71 lines | 2.8 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# coding: utf-8
"""
Utilities for dealing with text encodings
"""
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Copyright (C) 2008-2012 The IPython Development Team
#
# Distributed under the terms of the BSD License. The full license is in
# the file COPYING, distributed as part of this software.
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Imports
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
import sys
import locale
import warnings
# to deal with the possibility of sys.std* not being a stream at all
def get_stream_enc(stream, default=None):
"""Return the given stream's encoding or a default.
There are cases where ``sys.std*`` might not actually be a stream, so
check for the encoding attribute prior to returning it, and return
a default if it doesn't exist or evaluates as False. ``default``
is None if not provided.
"""
if not hasattr(stream, 'encoding') or not stream.encoding:
return default
else:
return stream.encoding
# Less conservative replacement for sys.getdefaultencoding, that will try
# to match the environment.
# Defined here as central function, so if we find better choices, we
# won't need to make changes all over IPython.
def getdefaultencoding(prefer_stream=True):
"""Return IPython's guess for the default encoding for bytes as text.
If prefer_stream is True (default), asks for stdin.encoding first,
to match the calling Terminal, but that is often None for subprocesses.
Then fall back on locale.getpreferredencoding(),
which should be a sensible platform default (that respects LANG environment),
and finally to sys.getdefaultencoding() which is the most conservative option,
and usually UTF8 as of Python 3.
"""
enc = None
if prefer_stream:
enc = get_stream_enc(sys.stdin)
if not enc or enc=='ascii':
try:
# There are reports of getpreferredencoding raising errors
# in some cases, which may well be fixed, but let's be conservative here.
enc = locale.getpreferredencoding()
except Exception:
pass
enc = enc or sys.getdefaultencoding()
# On windows `cp0` can be returned to indicate that there is no code page.
# Since cp0 is an invalid encoding return instead cp1252 which is the
# Western European default.
if enc == 'cp0':
warnings.warn(
"Invalid code page cp0 detected - using cp1252 instead."
"If cp1252 is incorrect please ensure a valid code page "
"is defined for the process.", RuntimeWarning)
return 'cp1252'
return enc
DEFAULT_ENCODING = getdefaultencoding()