I am also interested in the answer to this question.

On May 12, 1:52 pm, Oskar <[email protected]> wrote:
> Hey!
>
> I've been using web.seeother() without the 'raise' at the end of some
> POST functions, and it works as I expected. But I've seen it be used
> with a 'raise' in front of it, and I'm curious as to why it is often
> used like that. Is it just to break out of the function? Couldn't
> 'web.seeother(); return' or even 'return web.seeother()' be used as
> well? I'm a little confused because raise is typically used for
> exceptions but one may call web.seeother() even where there is nothing
> exceptionally going on.
>
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