SetSeverityLevel

Resumen

Controls how geoprocessing tools throw exceptions.

Debate

If the SetSeverityLevel function is not used, the default behavior is equivalent to setting the severity_level argument to 2; that is, tools will only throw an exception when the tool has an error.

Sintaxis

SetSeverityLevel (severity_level)
ParámetroExplicaciónTipo de datos
severity_level

Specifies the severity level

  • 0A tool will not throw an exception, even if the tool produces an error or warning.
  • 1If a tool produces a warning or an error, it will throw an exception.
  • 2If a tool produces an error, it will throw an exception. This is the default.
Integer

Muestra de código

SetSeverityLevel example

Use the SetSeverityLevel function to force tools to raise an exception when a tool warning is encountered.

import arcpy

fc1 = 'c:/resources/resources.gdb/boundary'
fc2 = 'c:/resources/resources.gdb/boundary2'

# Set the severity level to 1 (tool warnings will throw an exception)
arcpy.SetSeverityLevel(1)
print("Severity is set to : {0}".format(arcpy.GetSeverityLevel()))

try:
    # FeatureCompare returns warning messages when a miscompare is
    # found.  This normally would not cause an exception, however, by
    # setting the severity level to 1, all tool warnings will also
    # return an exception.
    arcpy.management.FeatureCompare(fc1, fc2, "OBJECTID")
except arcpy.ExecuteWarning:
    print(arcpy.GetMessages(1))
except arcpy.ExecuteError:
    print(arcpy.GetMessages(2))

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