
Setting it as a class level attribute seems to suppress it:
class TestError(Exception): ... message = "" ... ... def __init__(self, msg): ... self.message = msg
Since it's a string and passed by value I think this would work. I'll open up a ticket if one's not already. -J On Thu, Mar 10, 2011 at 10:12 PM, Glyph Lefkowitz <glyph@twistedmatrix.com> wrote:
On Mar 10, 2011, at 5:45 PM, Jason J. W. Williams wrote:
Hi Guys,
Been seeing this error for a long time and finally getting off my bum to see about fixing it:
twisted/web/error.py:53: DeprecationWarning: BaseException.message has been deprecated as of Python 2.6
It looks like the issue is the "self.message = message" assignment in __init__: https://gist.github.com/865097
Before I go about getting rid of the warning, does anyone have a reason Error.message should stick around?
This is the attribute used (in some cases) to relay the protocol-level error message printed in the status line area of the HTTP response. So yes, we need to keep it; it doesn't mean the same thing as Python's earlier 'message' attribute on Exception. If we can simply squash the warning that would be best.
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