On Tue, Jul 24, 2012 at 1:57 PM, Wanderer <wande...@dialup4less.com> wrote: > If I use the code > > assert False, "unhandled option" > > I get output like: > > option -q not recognized > for help use --help > > What other expressions can I use other than "unhandled option"? Is there a > list somewhere?
Are you using argparse or optparse or getopt or something else altogether? And where are you placing this assert? It would be helpful to see some actual code to understand what you are doing. And by the way, assert is a very bad way to check user input or to unconditionally raise an exception. The reason is that if Python is invoked with -O, then all assertions are removed from the compiled bytecode, and then your unconditional exception code doesn't raise any exception at all. If you want to raise an exception, just do it: raise Exception("unhandled option") Ideally, you would also subclass Exception to create a more specific exception class for your custom exception: class UnhandledOptionException(Exception): pass # Then, later on... raise UnhandledOptionException("-q") -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list