I am in the process of learning Python and I have reached the section about the pass
statement. The guide I\'m using defines it as being a Null
sta
Python has the syntactical requirement that code blocks (after if
, except
, def
, class
etc.) cannot be empty. Empty code blocks are however useful in a variety of different contexts, such as in examples below, which are the most frequent use cases I have seen.
Therefore, if nothing is supposed to happen in a code block, a pass
is needed for such a block to not produce an IndentationError
. Alternatively, any statement (including just a term to be evaluated, like the Ellipsis
literal ...
or a string, most often a docstring) can be used, but the pass
makes clear that indeed nothing is supposed to happen, and does not need to be actually evaluated and (at least temporarily) stored in memory.
Ignoring (all or) a certain type of Exception
(example from xml
):
try:
self.version = "Expat %d.%d.%d" % expat.version_info
except AttributeError:
pass # unknown
Note: Ignoring all types of raises, as in the following example from pandas
, is generally considered bad practice, because it also catches exceptions that should probably be passed on to the caller, e.g. KeyboardInterrupt
or SystemExit
(or even HardwareIsOnFireError
– How do you know you aren't running on a custom box with specific errors defined, which some calling application would want to know about?).
try:
os.unlink(filename_larry)
except:
pass
Instead using at least except Error:
or in this case preferably except OSError:
is considered much better practice. A quick analysis of all python modules I have installed gave me that more than 10% of all except ...: pass
statements catch all exceptions, so it's still a frequent pattern in python programming.
Deriving an exception class that does not add new behaviour (e.g. in scipy
):
class CompileError(Exception):
pass
Similarly, classes intended as abstract base class often have an explicit empty __init__
or other methods that subclasses are supposed to derive. (e.g. pebl
)
class _BaseSubmittingController(_BaseController):
def submit(self, tasks): pass
def retrieve(self, deferred_results): pass
Testing that code runs properly for a few test values, without caring about the results (from mpmath
):
for x, error in MDNewton(mp, f, (1,-2), verbose=0,
norm=lambda x: norm(x, inf)):
pass
In class or function definitions, often a docstring is already in place as the obligatory statement to be executed as the only thing in the block. In such cases, the block may contain pass
in addition to the docstring in order to say “This is indeed intended to do nothing.”, for example in pebl
:
class ParsingError(Exception):
"""Error encountered while parsing an ill-formed datafile."""
pass
In some cases, pass
is used as a placeholder to say “This method/class/if-block/... has not been implemented yet, but this will be the place to do it”, although I personally prefer the Ellipsis
literal ...
in order to strictly differentiate between this and the intentional “no-op” in the previous example. (Note that the Ellipsis literal is a valid expression only in Python 3)
For example, if I write a model in broad strokes, I might write
def update_agent(agent):
...
where others might have
def update_agent(agent):
pass
before
def time_step(agents):
for agent in agents:
update_agent(agent)
as a reminder to fill in the update_agent
function at a later point, but run some tests already to see if the rest of the code behaves as intended. (A third option for this case is raise NotImplementedError
. This is useful in particular for two cases: Either “This abstract method should be implemented by every subclass, there is no generic way to define it in this base class”, or “This function, with this name, is not yet implemented in this release, but this is what its signature will look like”)