# better-exceptions [![Travis](https://img.shields.io/travis/Qix-/better-exceptions.svg?style=flat-square)](https://travis-ci.org/Qix-/better-exceptions) Pretty and more helpful exceptions in Python, automatically. ![Example screenshot of exceptions](screenshot.png) ## Usage Install `better_exceptions` via pip: ```console $ pip install better_exceptions ``` And set the `BETTER_EXCEPTIONS` environment variable to any value: ```bash export BETTER_EXCEPTIONS=1 # Linux / OSX setx BETTER_EXCEPTIONS 1 # Windows ``` That's it! ### Python REPL (Interactive Shell) In order to use `better_exceptions` in the Python REPL, first install the package (as instructed above) and run: ```console $ python -m better_exceptions Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information. (BetterExceptionsConsole) >>> ``` in order to drop into a `better_exceptions`-enabled Python interactive shell. ### Advanced Usage If you want to allow the entirety of values to be outputted instead of being truncated to a certain amount of characters: ```python import better_exceptions better_exceptions.MAX_LENGTH = None ``` While using `better_exceptions` in production, do not forget to unset the `BETTER_EXCEPTIONS` variable to avoid leaking sensitive data in your logs. ### Use with unittest If you want to use `better_exceptions` to format `unittest`'s exception output, you can use the monkey patch below: ```python import sys import unittest import better_exceptions def patch(self, err, test): lines = better_exceptions.format_exception(*err) if sys.version_info[0] == 2: return u"".join(lines).encode("utf-8") return "".join(lines) unittest.result.TestResult._exc_info_to_string = patch ``` Note that this uses an undocumented method override, so it is **not** guaranteed to work on all platforms or versions of Python. ### Django Usage In `settings.py`, add your new class to the `INSTALLED_APPS` and `MIDDLEWARE` lists: ```python # ... INSTALLED_APPS = [ # ... "better_exceptions", ] # ... MIDDLEWARE = [ # ... "better_exceptions.integrations.django.BetterExceptionsMiddleware", ] # ... ``` example output: ![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/157132/56871937-5a07b480-69f1-11e9-9fd5-fac12382ebb7.png) ## Troubleshooting If you do not see beautiful exceptions, first make sure that the environment variable does exist. You can try `echo $BETTER_EXCEPTIONS` (Linux / OSX) or `echo %BETTER_EXCEPTIONS%` (Windows). On Linux and OSX, the `export` command does not add the variable permanently, you will probably need to edit the `~/.profile` file to make it persistent. On Windows, you need to open a new terminal after the `setx` command. Check that there is no conflict with another library, and that the `sys.excepthook` function has been correctly replaced with the `better_exceptions`'s one. Sometimes other components can set up their own exception handlers, such as the `python3-apport` Ubuntu package that you may need to uninstall. Make sure that you have not inadvertently deleted the `better_exceptions_hook.pth` file that should be in the same place as the `better_exceptions` folder where all of your Python packages are installed. Otherwise, try re-installing `better_exceptions`. You can also try to manually activate the hook by adding `import better_exceptions; better_exceptions.hook()` at the beginning of your script. Finally, if you still can not get this module to work, [open a new issue](https://github.com/Qix-/better-exceptions/issues/new) by describing your problem precisely and detailing your configuration (Python and `better_exceptions` versions, OS, code snippet, interpeter, etc.) so that we can reproduce the bug you are experiencing. # License Copyright © 2017, Josh Junon. Licensed under the [MIT license](LICENSE.txt).