Built-in Exceptions
In Python, all exceptions must be instances of a class that derives from BaseException
. In a try
statement with an except
clause that mentions a particular class, that clause also handles any exception classes derived from that class (but not exception classes from which it is derived). Two exception classes that are not related via subclassing are never equivalent, even if they have the same name.
The built-in exceptions listed below can be generated by the interpreter or built-in functions. Except where mentioned, they have an “associated value” indicating the detailed cause of the error. This may be a string or a tuple of several items of information (e.g., an error code and a string explaining the code). The associated value is usually passed as arguments to the exception class’s constructor.
User code can raise built-in exceptions. This can be used to test an exception handler or to report an error condition “just like” the situation in which the interpreter raises the same exception; but beware that there is nothing to prevent user code from raising an inappropriate error.
The built-in exception classes can be subclassed to define new exceptions; programmers are encouraged to derive new exceptions from the Exception
class or one of its subclasses, and not from BaseException
. More information on defining exceptions is available in the Python Tutorial under User-defined Exceptions.
When raising (or re-raising) an exception in an except
or finally
clause __context__
is automatically set to the last exception caught; if the new exception is not handled the traceback that is eventually displayed will include the originating exception(s) and the final exception.
When raising a new exception (rather than using a bare raise
to re-raise the exception currently being handled), the implicit exception context can be supplemented with an explicit cause by using from
with raise
:
raise new_exc from original_exc
The expression following from
must be an exception or None
. It will be set as __cause__
on the raised exception. Setting __cause__
also implicitly sets the __suppress_context__
attribute to True
, so that using raise new_exc from None
effectively replaces the old exception with the new one for display purposes (e.g. converting KeyError
to AttributeError
, while leaving the old exception available in __context__
for introspection when debugging.
The default traceback display code shows these chained exceptions in addition to the traceback for the exception itself. An explicitly chained exception in __cause__
is always shown when present. An implicitly chained exception in __context__
is shown only if __cause__
is None
and __suppress_context__
is false.
In either case, the exception itself is always shown after any chained exceptions so that the final line of the traceback always shows the last exception that was raised.
1. Base classes
The following exceptions are used mostly as base classes for other exceptions.
-
exception BaseException
-
The base class for all built-in exceptions. It is not meant to be directly inherited by user-defined classes (for that, use
Exception
). Ifstr()
is called on an instance of this class, the representation of the argument(s) to the instance are returned, or the empty string when there were no arguments.-
args
-
The tuple of arguments given to the exception constructor. Some built-in exceptions (like
OSError
) expect a certain number of arguments and assign a special meaning to the elements of this tuple, while others are usually called only with a single string giving an error message.
-
with_traceback(tb)
-
This method sets tb as the new traceback for the exception and returns the exception object. It is usually used in exception handling code like this:
try: ... except SomeException: tb = sys.exc_info()[2] raise OtherException(...).with_traceback(tb)
-
-
exception Exception
-
All built-in, non-system-exiting exceptions are derived from this class. All user-defined exceptions should also be derived from this class.
-
exception ArithmeticError
-
The base class for those built-in exceptions that are raised for various arithmetic errors:
OverflowError
,ZeroDivisionError
,FloatingPointError
.
-
exception BufferError
-
Raised when a buffer related operation cannot be performed.
-
exception LookupError
-
The base class for the exceptions that are raised when a key or index used on a mapping or sequence is invalid:
IndexError
,KeyError
. This can be raised directly bycodecs.lookup()
.
2. Concrete exceptions
The following exceptions are the exceptions that are usually raised.
-
exception AssertionError
-
Raised when an
assert
statement fails.
-
exception AttributeError
-
Raised when an attribute reference (see Attribute references) or assignment fails. (When an object does not support attribute references or attribute assignments at all,
TypeError
is raised.)
-
exception EOFError
-
Raised when the
input()
function hits an end-of-file condition (EOF) without reading any data. (N.B.: theio.IOBase.read()
andio.IOBase.readline()
methods return an empty string when they hit EOF.)
-
exception FloatingPointError
-
Raised when a floating point operation fails. This exception is always defined, but can only be raised when Python is configured with the
--with-fpectl
option, or theWANT_SIGFPE_HANDLER
symbol is defined in thepyconfig.h
file.
-
exception GeneratorExit
-
Raised when a generator or coroutine is closed; see
generator.close()
andcoroutine.close()
. It directly inherits fromBaseException
instead ofException
since it is technically not an error.
-
exception ImportError
-
Raised when an
import
statement fails to find the module definition or when afrom ... import
fails to find a name that is to be imported.The
name
andpath
attributes can be set using keyword-only arguments to the constructor. When set they represent the name of the module that was attempted to be imported and the path to any file which triggered the exception, respectively.Changed in version 3.3: Added the
name
andpath
attributes.
-
exception IndexError
-
Raised when a sequence subscript is out of range. (Slice indices are silently truncated to fall in the allowed range; if an index is not an integer,
TypeError
is raised.)
-
exception KeyError
-
Raised when a mapping (dictionary) key is not found in the set of existing keys.
-
exception KeyboardInterrupt
-
Raised when the user hits the interrupt key (normally Control-C or Delete). During execution, a check for interrupts is made regularly. The exception inherits from
BaseException
so as to not be accidentally caught by code that catchesException
and thus prevent the interpreter from exiting.
-
exception MemoryError
-
Raised when an operation runs out of memory but the situation may still be rescued (by deleting some objects). The associated value is a string indicating what kind of (internal) operation ran out of memory. Note that because of the underlying memory management architecture (C’s
malloc()
function), the interpreter may not always be able to completely recover from this situation; it nevertheless raises an exception so that a stack traceback can be printed, in case a run-away program was the cause.
-
exception NameError
-
Raised when a local or global name is not found. This applies only to unqualified names. The associated value is an error message that includes the name that could not be found.
-
exception NotImplementedError
-
This exception is derived from
RuntimeError
. In user defined base classes, abstract methods should raise this exception when they require derived classes to override the method.
-
exception OSError([arg])
-
exception OSError(errno, strerror[, filename[, winerror[, filename2]]])
-
This exception is raised when a system function returns a system-related error, including I/O failures such as “file not found” or “disk full” (not for illegal argument types or other incidental errors).
The second form of the constructor sets the corresponding attributes, described below. The attributes default to
None
if not specified. For backwards compatibility, if three arguments are passed, theargs
attribute contains only a 2-tuple of the first two constructor arguments.The constructor often actually returns a subclass of
OSError
, as described in OS exceptions below. The particular subclass depends on the finalerrno
value. This behaviour only occurs when constructingOSError
directly or via an alias, and is not inherited when subclassing.-
errno
-
A numeric error code from the C variable
errno
.
-
winerror
-
Under Windows, this gives you the native Windows error code. The
errno
attribute is then an approximate translation, in POSIX terms, of that native error code.Under Windows, if the winerror constructor argument is an integer, the
errno
attribute is determined from the Windows error code, and the errno argument is ignored. On other platforms, the winerror argument is ignored, and thewinerror
attribute does not exist.
-
strerror
-
The corresponding error message, as provided by the operating system. It is formatted by the C functions
perror()
under POSIX, andFormatMessage()
under Windows.
-
filename
-
filename2
-
For exceptions that involve a file system path (such as
open()
oros.unlink()
),filename
is the file name passed to the function. For functions that involve two file system paths (such asos.rename()
),filename2
corresponds to the second file name passed to the function.
Changed in version 3.3:
EnvironmentError
,IOError
,WindowsError
,socket.error
,select.error
andmmap.error
have been merged intoOSError
, and the constructor may return a subclass.Changed in version 3.4: The
filename
attribute is now the original file name passed to the function, instead of the name encoded to or decoded from the filesystem encoding. Also, the filename2 constructor argument and attribute was added. -
-
exception OverflowError
-
Raised when the result of an arithmetic operation is too large to be represented. This cannot occur for integers (which would rather raise
MemoryError
than give up). However, for historical reasons, OverflowError is sometimes raised for integers that are outside a required range. Because of the lack of standardization of floating point exception handling in C, most floating point operations are not checked.
-
exception RecursionError
-
This exception is derived from
RuntimeError
. It is raised when the interpreter detects that the maximum recursion depth (seesys.getrecursionlimit()
) is exceeded.New in version 3.5: Previously, a plain
RuntimeError
was raised.
-
exception ReferenceError
-
This exception is raised when a weak reference proxy, created by the
weakref.proxy()
function, is used to access an attribute of the referent after it has been garbage collected. For more information on weak references, see theweakref
module.
-
exception RuntimeError
-
Raised when an error is detected that doesn’t fall in any of the other categories. The associated value is a string indicating what precisely went wrong.
-
exception StopIteration
-
Raised by built-in function
next()
and an iterator’s__next__()
method to signal that there are no further items produced by the iterator.The exception object has a single attribute
value
, which is given as an argument when constructing the exception, and defaults toNone
.When a generator or coroutine function returns, a new
StopIteration
instance is raised, and the value returned by the function is used as thevalue
parameter to the constructor of the exception.If a generator function defined in the presence of a
from __future__ import generator_stop
directive raisesStopIteration
, it will be converted into aRuntimeError
(retaining theStopIteration
as the new exception’s cause).Changed in version 3.3: Added
value
attribute and the ability for generator functions to use it to return a value.Changed in version 3.5: Introduced the RuntimeError transformation.
-
exception StopAsyncIteration
-
Must be raised by
__anext__()
method of an asynchronous iterator object to stop the iteration.New in version 3.5.
-
exception SyntaxError
-
Raised when the parser encounters a syntax error. This may occur in an
import
statement, in a call to the built-in functionsexec()
oreval()
, or when reading the initial script or standard input (also interactively).Instances of this class have attributes
filename
,lineno
,offset
andtext
for easier access to the details.str()
of the exception instance returns only the message.
-
exception IndentationError
-
Base class for syntax errors related to incorrect indentation. This is a subclass of
SyntaxError
.
-
exception TabError
-
Raised when indentation contains an inconsistent use of tabs and spaces. This is a subclass of
IndentationError
.
-
exception SystemError
-
Raised when the interpreter finds an internal error, but the situation does not look so serious to cause it to abandon all hope. The associated value is a string indicating what went wrong (in low-level terms).
You should report this to the author or maintainer of your Python interpreter. Be sure to report the version of the Python interpreter (
sys.version
; it is also printed at the start of an interactive Python session), the exact error message (the exception’s associated value) and if possible the source of the program that triggered the error.
-
exception SystemExit
-
This exception is raised by the
sys.exit()
function. It inherits fromBaseException
instead ofException
so that it is not accidentally caught by code that catchesException
. This allows the exception to properly propagate up and cause the interpreter to exit. When it is not handled, the Python interpreter exits; no stack traceback is printed. The constructor accepts the same optional argument passed tosys.exit()
. If the value is an integer, it specifies the system exit status (passed to C’sexit()
function); if it isNone
, the exit status is zero; if it has another type (such as a string), the object’s value is printed and the exit status is one.A call to
sys.exit()
is translated into an exception so that clean-up handlers (finally
clauses oftry
statements) can be executed, and so that a debugger can execute a script without running the risk of losing control. Theos._exit()
function can be used if it is absolutely positively necessary to exit immediately (for example, in the child process after a call toos.fork()
).-
code
-
The exit status or error message that is passed to the constructor. (Defaults to
None
.)
-
-
exception TypeError
-
Raised when an operation or function is applied to an object of inappropriate type. The associated value is a string giving details about the type mismatch.
-
exception UnboundLocalError
-
Raised when a reference is made to a local variable in a function or method, but no value has been bound to that variable. This is a subclass of
NameError
.
-
exception UnicodeError
-
Raised when a Unicode-related encoding or decoding error occurs. It is a subclass of
ValueError
.UnicodeError
has attributes that describe the encoding or decoding error. For example,err.object[err.start:err.end]
gives the particular invalid input that the codec failed on.-
encoding
-
The name of the encoding that raised the error.
-
reason
-
A string describing the specific codec error.
-
object
-
The object the codec was attempting to encode or decode.
-
start
-
The first index of invalid data in
object
.
-
end
-
The index after the last invalid data in
object
.
-
-
exception UnicodeEncodeError
-
Raised when a Unicode-related error occurs during encoding. It is a subclass of
UnicodeError
.
-
exception UnicodeDecodeError
-
Raised when a Unicode-related error occurs during decoding. It is a subclass of
UnicodeError
.
-
exception UnicodeTranslateError
-
Raised when a Unicode-related error occurs during translating. It is a subclass of
UnicodeError
.
-
exception ValueError
-
Raised when a built-in operation or function receives an argument that has the right type but an inappropriate value, and the situation is not described by a more precise exception such as
IndexError
.
-
exception ZeroDivisionError
-
Raised when the second argument of a division or modulo operation is zero. The associated value is a string indicating the type of the operands and the operation.
The following exceptions are kept for compatibility with previous versions; starting from Python 3.3, they are aliases of OSError
.
-
exception EnvironmentError
-
exception IOError
-
exception WindowsError
-
Only available on Windows.
2.1. OS exceptions
The following exceptions are subclasses of OSError
, they get raised depending on the system error code.
-
exception BlockingIOError
-
Raised when an operation would block on an object (e.g. socket) set for non-blocking operation. Corresponds to
errno
EAGAIN
,EALREADY
,EWOULDBLOCK
andEINPROGRESS
.In addition to those of
OSError
,BlockingIOError
can have one more attribute:-
characters_written
-
An integer containing the number of characters written to the stream before it blocked. This attribute is available when using the buffered I/O classes from the
io
module.
-
-
exception ChildProcessError
-
Raised when an operation on a child process failed. Corresponds to
errno
ECHILD
.
-
exception ConnectionError
-
A base class for connection-related issues.
Subclasses are
BrokenPipeError
,ConnectionAbortedError
,ConnectionRefusedError
andConnectionResetError
.
-
exception BrokenPipeError
-
A subclass of
ConnectionError
, raised when trying to write on a pipe while the other end has been closed, or trying to write on a socket which has been shutdown for writing. Corresponds toerrno
EPIPE
andESHUTDOWN
.
-
exception ConnectionAbortedError
-
A subclass of
ConnectionError
, raised when a connection attempt is aborted by the peer. Corresponds toerrno
ECONNABORTED
.
-
exception ConnectionRefusedError
-
A subclass of
ConnectionError
, raised when a connection attempt is refused by the peer. Corresponds toerrno
ECONNREFUSED
.
-
exception ConnectionResetError
-
A subclass of
ConnectionError
, raised when a connection is reset by the peer. Corresponds toerrno
ECONNRESET
.
-
exception FileExistsError
-
Raised when trying to create a file or directory which already exists. Corresponds to
errno
EEXIST
.
-
exception FileNotFoundError
-
Raised when a file or directory is requested but doesn’t exist. Corresponds to
errno
ENOENT
.
-
exception InterruptedError
-
Raised when a system call is interrupted by an incoming signal. Corresponds to
errno
EINTR
.Changed in version 3.5: Python now retries system calls when a syscall is interrupted by a signal, except if the signal handler raises an exception (see PEP 475 for the rationale), instead of raising
InterruptedError
.
-
exception IsADirectoryError
-
Raised when a file operation (such as
os.remove()
) is requested on a directory. Corresponds toerrno
EISDIR
.
-
exception NotADirectoryError
-
Raised when a directory operation (such as
os.listdir()
) is requested on something which is not a directory. Corresponds toerrno
ENOTDIR
.
-
exception PermissionError
-
Raised when trying to run an operation without the adequate access rights - for example filesystem permissions. Corresponds to
errno
EACCES
andEPERM
.
-
exception ProcessLookupError
-
Raised when a given process doesn’t exist. Corresponds to
errno
ESRCH
.
-
exception TimeoutError
-
Raised when a system function timed out at the system level. Corresponds to
errno
ETIMEDOUT
.
New in version 3.3: All the above OSError
subclasses were added.
See also
PEP 3151 - Reworking the OS and IO exception hierarchy
3. Warnings
The following exceptions are used as warning categories; see the warnings
module for more information.
-
exception Warning
-
Base class for warning categories.
-
exception UserWarning
-
Base class for warnings generated by user code.
-
exception DeprecationWarning
-
Base class for warnings about deprecated features.
-
exception PendingDeprecationWarning
-
Base class for warnings about features which will be deprecated in the future.
-
exception SyntaxWarning
-
Base class for warnings about dubious syntax.
-
exception RuntimeWarning
-
Base class for warnings about dubious runtime behavior.
-
exception FutureWarning
-
Base class for warnings about constructs that will change semantically in the future.
-
exception ImportWarning
-
Base class for warnings about probable mistakes in module imports.
-
exception UnicodeWarning
-
Base class for warnings related to Unicode.
-
exception ResourceWarning
-
Base class for warnings related to resource usage.
New in version 3.2.
4. Exception hierarchy
The class hierarchy for built-in exceptions is:
BaseException +-- SystemExit +-- KeyboardInterrupt +-- GeneratorExit +-- Exception +-- StopIteration +-- StopAsyncIteration +-- ArithmeticError | +-- FloatingPointError | +-- OverflowError | +-- ZeroDivisionError +-- AssertionError +-- AttributeError +-- BufferError +-- EOFError +-- ImportError +-- LookupError | +-- IndexError | +-- KeyError +-- MemoryError +-- NameError | +-- UnboundLocalError +-- OSError | +-- BlockingIOError | +-- ChildProcessError | +-- ConnectionError | | +-- BrokenPipeError | | +-- ConnectionAbortedError | | +-- ConnectionRefusedError | | +-- ConnectionResetError | +-- FileExistsError | +-- FileNotFoundError | +-- InterruptedError | +-- IsADirectoryError | +-- NotADirectoryError | +-- PermissionError | +-- ProcessLookupError | +-- TimeoutError +-- ReferenceError +-- RuntimeError | +-- NotImplementedError | +-- RecursionError +-- SyntaxError | +-- IndentationError | +-- TabError +-- SystemError +-- TypeError +-- ValueError | +-- UnicodeError | +-- UnicodeDecodeError | +-- UnicodeEncodeError | +-- UnicodeTranslateError +-- Warning +-- DeprecationWarning +-- PendingDeprecationWarning +-- RuntimeWarning +-- SyntaxWarning +-- UserWarning +-- FutureWarning +-- ImportWarning +-- UnicodeWarning +-- BytesWarning +-- ResourceWarning
© 2001–2020 Python Software Foundation
Licensed under the PSF License.
https://docs.python.org/3.5/library/exceptions.html