logging = logging.getLogger(__name__)
genkuro
genkuro at gmail.com
Tue Jun 15 12:03:50 EDT 2010
On Jun 15, 8:49 am, Mark Lawrence <breamore... at yahoo.co.uk> wrote:
> On 15/06/2010 16:35, genkuro wrote:
>
> > Newbie here. I may be missing something obvious, in which case,
> > please feel free to berate and laugh at me.
>
> > Here's a dubious line of code:
> > logging = logging.getLogger(__name__)
>
> > How can I refer to the original logging package "logging" after this
> > statement is run? Specifically, I'm trying to add a log handler with
> > logging.addHandler(x) and it is of course failing.
>
> > Thanks,
> > Brian
>
> Change it to something like logger = logging.getLogger(__name__), then
> logger.addHandler(x). If you don't do this, your logging shadows the
> logging module so you won't get very far.
>
> HTH.
>
> Mark Lawrence
Hi Mark -
I thought that would be the answer.
I asked because I'm working with a framework where logging is
similarly renamed in almost every file. The framework is under
development so refactoring is an option.
I'm coming to Python from Java. I'm still getting a feel for scoping
limits. For the sake of curiosity, is there another way to refer to a
package besides name?
Thanks,
Brian
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