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Python 3 Object Oriented Programming

You're reading from   Python 3 Object Oriented Programming If you feel it‚Äôs time you learned object-oriented programming techniques, this is the perfect book for you. Clearly written with practical exercises, it‚Äôs the painless way to learn how to harness the power of OOP in Python.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2010
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781849511261
Length 404 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Dusty Phillips Dusty Phillips
Author Profile Icon Dusty Phillips
Dusty Phillips
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Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Python 3 Object Oriented Programming
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
Preface
1. Object-oriented Design FREE CHAPTER 2. Objects in Python 3. When Objects are Alike 4. Expecting the Unexpected 5. When to Use Object-oriented Programming 6. Python Data Structures 7. Python Object-oriented Shortcuts 8. Python Design Patterns I 9. Python Design Patterns II 10. Files and Strings 11. Testing Object-oriented Programs 12. Common Python 3 Libraries Index

Exception hierarchy


We've already encountered many of the most common built-in exceptions, and you'll probably encounter the rest over the course of your regular Python development. As we noticed above, most exceptions are subclasses of the Exception class. But this is not true of all exceptions. Exception itself actually inherits from a class called BaseException (In fact, all exceptions must extend the BaseException class or one of its subclasses). There are two key exceptions, SystemExit and KeyboardInterrupt, that derive directly from BaseException instead of Exception.

SystemExit is an exception that is raised whenever the program exits naturally, typically because we called the sys.exit function somewhere in our code (for example, because the user selected an exit menu item, clicked the "close" button on a window, or entered a command to shut down a server). The exception is designed to allow us to clean up code before the program ultimately exits, so we generally don't need to handle...

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