From 26b41f7fac292829291bc168728847e44f5f7dde Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Pablo Galindo Date: Mon, 30 Sep 2024 23:11:11 +0100 Subject: [PATCH] PEP 790: Removing the parentheses requirement from except expressions --- peps/pep-0790.rst | 137 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 137 insertions(+) create mode 100644 peps/pep-0790.rst diff --git a/peps/pep-0790.rst b/peps/pep-0790.rst new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..c0abb7405f4 --- /dev/null +++ b/peps/pep-0790.rst @@ -0,0 +1,137 @@ +PEP: 790 +Title: Removing the parentheses requirement from ``except`` expressions +Author: Pablo Galindo , Brett Cannon +PEP-Delegate: TBD +Discussions-To: xxxx +Status: Draft +Type: Standards Track +Created: 30-Sep-2024 +Python-Version: 3.14 + + +Abstract +======== + +This PEP [1]_ proposes to allow unparenthesized ``except`` blocks in Python's exception handling syntax. Currently, when catching multiple exceptions, parentheses are required around the exception types. This was a Python 2 remnant. This PEP suggests allowing the omission of these parentheses, simplifying the syntax, making it more consistent with other parts of the syntax that make parentheses optional, and improving readability in certain cases. + + +Motivation +========== + +The current syntax for catching multiple exceptions requires parentheses in the ``except`` expression: :: + + try: + ... + except (ExceptionA, ExceptionB, ExceptionC): + ... + +While this syntax is clear and unambiguous, it can be seen as unnecessarily verbose in some cases, especially when catching a large number of exceptions. By allowing the omission of parentheses, we can simplify the syntax: :: + + try: + ... + except ExceptionA, ExceptionB, ExceptionC: + ... + +This change would bring the syntax more in line with other comma-separated lists in Python, such as function arguments, generator expressions inside of a function call, and tuple literals, where parentheses are optional. + + +Rationale +========= + +The decision to allow unparenthesized ``except`` blocks is based on the following considerations: + +1. Simplicity: Removing the requirement for parentheses simplifies the syntax, making it more consistent with other parts of the language. + +2. Readability: In cases where many exceptions are being caught, the removal of parentheses can improve readability by reducing visual clutter. + +3. Consistency: This change makes the ``except`` clause more consistent with other parts of Python where unambiguous, comma-separated lists don't require parentheses. + +Specification +============= + +The syntax for the except clause will be modified to allow an unparenthesized list of exception types. The grammar will be updated as follows: :: + + except_block[excepthandler_ty]: + | invalid_except_stmt_indent + | 'except' e=expressions t=['as' z=NAME { z }] ':' b=block { + _PyAST_ExceptHandler(e, (t) ? ((expr_ty) t)->v.Name.id : NULL, b, EXTRA) } + | 'except' ':' b=block { _PyAST_ExceptHandler(NULL, NULL, b, EXTRA) } + | invalid_except_stmt + except_star_block[excepthandler_ty]: + | invalid_except_star_stmt_indent + | 'except' '*' e=expressions t=['as' z=NAME { z }] ':' b=block { + _PyAST_ExceptHandler(e, (t) ? ((expr_ty) t)->v.Name.id : NULL, b, EXTRA) } + | invalid_except_star_stmt + + +This allows both the current parenthesized syntax and the new unparenthesized syntax: :: + + try: + ... + except (ExceptionA, ExceptionB): # Still valid + ... + except ExceptionC, ExceptionD: # New syntax + ... + +The semantics of exception handling remain unchanged. The interpreter will catch any of the listed exceptions, regardless of whether they are parenthesized or not. + + +Backwards Compatibility +======================= + +This change is fully backwards compatible. All existing code using parenthesized ``except`` blocks will continue to work without modification. The new syntax is purely additive and does not break any existing code. + + +Security Implications +===================== + +There are no known security implications for this change. The semantics of exception handling remain the same, and this is purely a syntactic change. + + +How to Teach This +================= + +For new Python users, the unparenthesized syntax can be taught as the standard way to catch multiple exceptions: :: + + try: + risky_operation() + except ValueError, TypeError, OSError: + handle_errors() + +For experienced users, it can be introduced as a new, optional syntax that can be used interchangeably with the parenthesized version. Documentation should note that both forms are equivalent: :: + + # These are equivalent: + except (ValueError, TypeError): + ... + + except ValueError, TypeError: + ... + +It should be emphasized that this is purely a syntactic change and does not affect the behaviour of exception handling. + + +Reference Implementation +======================== + +A proof-of-concept implementation is available at https://github.com/pablogsal/cpython/commits/notuples/. This implementation modifies the Python parser to accept the new syntax and ensures that it behaves identically to the parenthesized version. + + +Rejected Ideas +============== + +1. Allowing mixed parenthesized and unparenthesized syntax: :: + + except (ValueError, TypeError), OSError: + +This was rejected due to the potential for confusion and to maintain a clear distinction between the two styles. + +Footnotes +========= + +.. [1] Originally named "Parenthetically Speaking, We Don't Need 'Em" + +Copyright +========= + +This document is placed in the public domain or under the +CC0-1.0-Universal license, whichever is more permissive.