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2:45 PM
@AshwinPhadke There is no clear answer for this, which is why the language (like many others) offers you the flexibility. It depends on why the exceptions are being raised. You should handle them at the point in the process where it makes sense to handle them, which is sometimes nowhere (or only at the top level of the main loop, which is not really handling them so much as converting them into a form more pleasant for the user).
@alkasm Yeah, this is more of a "how computers work" thing than a Python thing.
 
2 hours later…
4:19 PM
@AshwinPhadke An old discussion on this topic:
Jul 17, 2015 at 12:53, by Wayne Conrad
It doesn't seem too broad. The correct Python answer is the same (I think) as the correct Ruby answer: "let exceptions bubble up. Only catch them when needed. If you don't know if you need to catch an exception, then you don't."
Jul 17, 2015 at 12:55, by PM 2Ring
In accordance with the ancient programmer proverb: Never test for an error condition that you don't know how to handle.
Jul 17, 2015 at 13:03, by PM 2Ring
Google says that it's known as Steinbach's Rule or Steinbach's Guideline for Systems Programming, but it doesn't say who Steinbach is or was.
 
3 hours later…
7:04 PM
for so long I just went with whatever made sense, local vs global, looks like doesn't really matter that much, thanks for the inputs.
 
3 hours later…
10:18 PM
is there a way to change the behaviour of unittest.main()? I'm practicing automating the testing of GitHub's website, and it automates logging in fine but once the account page is loaded it clicks the "create" link even though the code I wrote doesn't say to do that. I've tried executing the code by manually creating an instance of my testcase and then calling its functions line by line and it works fine, so I believe the problem lies in the way unittest.main is executing the code

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