I agree with Nick that exceptions are the way to do things in Python and with Donald that in general, Python's use of exceptions has caused problems. But I don't think that this forum is the correct place to discuss Python conventions, and so I would ordinarily say that we should just accept that there will be problems and use the NotImplementedError, assuming that "solution" doesn't cause a firestorm that delays acceptance for a significant period of time. The reasoning behind this is that Python has in general adopted this approach (Nick is right that they would have used NotImplementedError for binary operations except for performance issues) even with its problems. However, another solution was dismissed without much thought: using the "UnsupportedOperation" exception. We could for now simply require an extra two lines in all backends: class DistutilsUnsupportedOperation(RuntimeError): pass and then put UnsupportedOperation in the "distutils" library in 3.7, with an eventual move to that. It's not pretty but there have been plenty of hacks for backwards compatibility so far (it's rare to see a project without some sort of compat.py file). 2017-08-25 13:34 GMT-05:00 Donald Stufft <donald@stufft.io>:
The thing being bubbled up is a backend accidentally calling an API that has yet to be implemented (an error that should be reported) being bubbled up and erroneously handled as the backend reporting it doesn't support making a sdist (not an error, son no traceback).
Sent from my iPhone
On Aug 25, 2017, at 2:23 PM, Paul Moore <p.f.moore@gmail.com> wrote:
There's little or no opportunity here for letting exceptions bubble up to the user, or passing complex data back to the frontend. Ultimately, it's pretty much immaterial which form of reporting is used.