KeyboardInterrupt — Intermediate Examples
Raised when the user presses Ctrl+C
Exception chaining with KeyboardInterrupt
Using 'raise from' to chain KeyboardInterrupt with other exceptions.
python
# Exception chaining class ApplicationError(Exception): pass try: try: raise KeyboardInterrupt("simulated interrupt") except KeyboardInterrupt as original: raise ApplicationError("Operation failed") from original except ApplicationError as e: print(f"App error: {e}") print(f"Caused by: {e.__cause__}")
Exception chaining preserves the original error context, making debugging easier.
KeyboardInterrupt in context managers
Handling KeyboardInterrupt within context managers.
python
# Using context managers with exception handling class SafeOperation: def __enter__(self): print("Starting operation") return self def __exit__(self, exc_type, exc_val, exc_tb): if exc_type is KeyboardInterrupt: print(f"Handled {exc_type.__name__}: {exc_val}") return True # Suppress the exception return False with SafeOperation(): raise KeyboardInterrupt("simulated interrupt") print("Continued after handled exception")
Context managers can catch and handle exceptions in their __exit__ method.
Want to try these examples interactively?
Open Intermediate Playground