Add a method to list the current named logging levels
Edward Spencer
tedpfspencer at gmail.com
Wed Mar 30 04:34:22 EDT 2022
在 2021年9月3日星期五 UTC+1 18:50:51,<Barry> 写道:
> > On 2 Sep 2021, at 23:38, Dieter Maurer <die... at handshake.de> wrote:
> >
> > Edward Spencer wrote at 2021-9-2 10:02 -0700:
> >> Sometimes I like to pass the logging level up to the command line params so my user can specific what level of logging they want. However there is no easy method for pulling the named logging level names.
> >>
> >> Looking into the code, it would actually be incredibly easy to implement;
> >>
> >> in `logging.__init__.py`;
> >>
> >> def listLevelNames():
> >> return _nameToLevel.keys()
> >>
> >> You could obviously add some other features, like listing only the defaults, sorted by numerical level or alphabetically, etc. But really this basic implementation would be enough to expose the internal variables which shouldn't be accessed because they change (and in fact, between python 2 and 3, they did).
> >>
> >> Any thoughts?
> >
> > Usually, you use 5 well known log levels: "DEBUG", "INFO", "WARNING",
> > "ERROR" and "CRITICAL".
> > No need to provide a special function listing those levels.
> I add my own levels, but then I know I did it.
>
> Barry
>
> >
> >
> >
> > --
> > Dieter
> > --
> > https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
> >
Yes, the names are already well defined. But every software project anyone has that needs to use logging then has to define that list, which is a waste of time since they're already defined inside the logging repo. But no-one can access them unless they use protected variables. If it's a case of not wanting users to be able to modify the defaults, then just define that list of log levels as a tuple. Hiding it is unnecessary.
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