Metadata-Version: 2.1
Name: py-exceptions
Version: 1.2.2
Summary: A simple python exception reporter
Home-page: https://github.com/PotatoHD404/py-exceptions
Author: PotatoHD404
License: MIT
Keywords: py-exceptions
Platform: UNKNOWN
Classifier: Development Status :: 3 - Alpha
Classifier: Intended Audience :: Developers
Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: MIT License
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.8
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.9
Classifier: Topic :: Software Development :: Libraries :: Python Modules
Description-Content-Type: text/markdown
Requires-Dist: Werkzeug (>=2.0.1)
Requires-Dist: Jinja2

# py-exceptions [![PyPI version](https://badge.fury.io/py/py-exceptions.svg)](https://badge.fury.io/py/py-exceptions)

## *A simple python exception reporter*

### Description

This library provides great stacktrace and web request information like Django does It can save it to html, return html
to your code or even response in AWS lambda format

The library nicely covers all your secret variables and request data in its report

### Screenshots

![Beautiful image](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/potatohd404/py-exceptions/master/images/demo.png)

![Another beautiful image](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/potatohd404/py-exceptions/master/images/demo2.png)

## Quickstart

### Installation

```sh
pip install py-exception
```

### Simple example

Add decorator to function

```python
from pyexceptions import handle_exceptions


def divide(a, b):
    return a / b


@handle_exceptions
def main():
    i = 5
    j = 0
    c = divide(i, j)
    print(c)


if __name__ == '__main__':
    main()
```

You can also override folder for exception reports

```python
from pyexceptions import handle_exceptions


def divide(a, b):
    return a / b


@handle_exceptions(exceptions_folder=f'./SomeFolderPath')
def main():
    i = 5
    j = 0
    c = divide(i, j)
    print(c)


if __name__ == '__main__':
    main()
```

### AWS Lambda example

It is hard to determine what's went wrong when you are using AWS lambda. So you can use the example not only to get full
stacktrace but to get lambda event and context information:

```python
from pyexceptions import handle_exceptions


@handle_exceptions(is_lambda=True)
def lambda_handler(event, context):
    message = f"Hello {event['first_name']} {event['last_name']}!"
    return {
        'message': message
    }
```

### Exclude from stacktrace

There may be situations when you don't want to see part of stacktrace

So if your application looks like this:

```python
from pyexceptions import handle_exceptions

def divide(a, b):
    return a / b

def real_main():
    i = 5
    j = 0
    c = divide(i, j)
    print(c)

def wrapper():
    real_main()

@handle_exceptions(exclude = 3)
def main():
    wrapper()

if __name__ == '__main__':
    main()
```

and you want to exclude all stacktrace from main to wrapper
you need to pass `file_name.function_name` as exclude argument

### Other functions

You can also want to use these functions:

Make function that returns HTML and don't save the result:

```python
from pyexceptions import handle_exceptions


@handle_exceptions(save=False)
def main():
    ...
```


Make function return production html:

```python
from pyexceptions import handle_exceptions


@handle_exceptions(production=True)
def main():
    ...
```

![Beautiful image](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/potatohd404/py-exceptions/master/images/demo3.png)


Or you may want to write your own logic To do so you need to import the ExceptionHandler class

```python
from pyexceptions import ExceptionHandler
```

That's how it looks like:

```python

class ExceptionHandler:
    """Organize and coordinate reporting on exceptions."""

    def __init__(self, lambda_event: dict = None, context: object = None, exclude: int = 1, production: bool = False):
        """Exception reporter initializer

        Args:
            lambda_event (dict, optional): AWS lambda event. Defaults to None.
            context (object, optional): AWS lambda context. Defaults to None.
            exclude (int, optional): Determines how many frames of traceback to exclude. Defaults None.
            production (bool, optional): Determines if handler should be enabled. Defaults False.
        """
        self.__reporter = ExceptionReporter(lambda_event=lambda_event, context=context, exclude=exclude, # noqa
                                            production=production)

    def get_traceback_html(self):
        """Return HTML version of debug 500 HTTP error page."""
        return self.__reporter.get_traceback_html()

    def get_traceback_lambda(self):
        """Return AWS lambda version of debug 500 HTTP error page."""
        return self.__reporter.get_lambda_response()
```

## Attribution

This implementation draws upon work from:

- [Django](https://github.com/django/django)

- [vercel-python-wsgi](https://github.com/ardnt/vercel-python-wsgi)


