7. contextlib
— Utilities for with
-statement contexts¶
New in version 2.5.
Source code: :source:`Lib/contextlib.py`
This module provides utilities for common tasks involving the with
statement. For more information see also Context Manager Types and
context-managers.
Functions provided:
-
contextlib.
contextmanager
(func)[source]¶ This function is a decorator that can be used to define a factory function for
with
statement context managers, without needing to create a class or separate__enter__()
and__exit__()
methods.A simple example (this is not recommended as a real way of generating HTML!):
from contextlib import contextmanager @contextmanager def tag(name): print "<%s>" % name yield print "</%s>" % name >>> with tag("h1"): ... print "foo" ... <h1> foo </h1>
The function being decorated must return a generator-iterator when called. This iterator must yield exactly one value, which will be bound to the targets in the
with
statement’sas
clause, if any.At the point where the generator yields, the block nested in the
with
statement is executed. The generator is then resumed after the block is exited. If an unhandled exception occurs in the block, it is reraised inside the generator at the point where the yield occurred. Thus, you can use atry
...except
...finally
statement to trap the error (if any), or ensure that some cleanup takes place. If an exception is trapped merely in order to log it or to perform some action (rather than to suppress it entirely), the generator must reraise that exception. Otherwise the generator context manager will indicate to thewith
statement that the exception has been handled, and execution will resume with the statement immediately following thewith
statement.
-
contextlib.
nested
(mgr1[, mgr2[, ...]])[source]¶ Combine multiple context managers into a single nested context manager.
This function has been deprecated in favour of the multiple manager form of the
with
statement.The one advantage of this function over the multiple manager form of the
with
statement is that argument unpacking allows it to be used with a variable number of context managers as follows:from contextlib import nested with nested(*managers): do_something()
Note that if the
__exit__()
method of one of the nested context managers indicates an exception should be suppressed, no exception information will be passed to any remaining outer context managers. Similarly, if the__exit__()
method of one of the nested managers raises an exception, any previous exception state will be lost; the new exception will be passed to the__exit__()
methods of any remaining outer context managers. In general,__exit__()
methods should avoid raising exceptions, and in particular they should not re-raise a passed-in exception.This function has two major quirks that have led to it being deprecated. Firstly, as the context managers are all constructed before the function is invoked, the
__new__()
and__init__()
methods of the inner context managers are not actually covered by the scope of the outer context managers. That means, for example, that usingnested()
to open two files is a programming error as the first file will not be closed promptly if an exception is thrown when opening the second file.Secondly, if the
__enter__()
method of one of the inner context managers raises an exception that is caught and suppressed by the__exit__()
method of one of the outer context managers, this construct will raiseRuntimeError
rather than skipping the body of thewith
statement.Developers that need to support nesting of a variable number of context managers can either use the
warnings
module to suppress the DeprecationWarning raised by this function or else use this function as a model for an application specific implementation.Deprecated since version 2.7: The with-statement now supports this functionality directly (without the confusing error prone quirks).
-
contextlib.
closing
(thing)[source]¶ Return a context manager that closes thing upon completion of the block. This is basically equivalent to:
from contextlib import contextmanager @contextmanager def closing(thing): try: yield thing finally: thing.close()
And lets you write code like this:
from contextlib import closing import urllib with closing(urllib.urlopen('http://www.python.org')) as page: for line in page: print line
without needing to explicitly close
page
. Even if an error occurs,page.close()
will be called when thewith
block is exited.
See also
- PEP 343 - The “with” statement
- The specification, background, and examples for the Python
with
statement.