source = """
print( 'helo' )
if __name__ == '__main__':
print( 'yeah!' )
#"""
print( compile( source, '<whatever>', 'exec' ) )
i get ::
File "<whatever>", line 6
#
^
SyntaxError: invalid syntax
i can avoid this exception by (1) deleting the trailing ``#``; (2)
deleting or outcommenting the ``if __name__ == '__main__':\n
print( 'yeah!' )`` lines; (3) add a newline to very end of the
source.
moreover, if i have the source end without a trailing newline right
behind the ``print( 'yeah!' )``, the source will also compile without
error.
i could also reproduce this behavior with python 2.6, so it’s not new
to the 3k series.
i find this error to be highly irritating, all the more since when i
put above source inside a file and execute it directly or have it
imported, no error will occur—which is the expected behavior.
a ``#`` (hash) outside a string literal should always represent the
start of a (possibly empty) comment in a python source; moreover, the
presence or absence of a ``if __name__ == '__main__'`` clause should
not change the interpretation of a soure on a syntactical level.
can anyone reproduce the above problem, and/or comment on the
phenomenon?
cheers
I believe you're encountering this bug:
http://bugs.python.org/issue1184112
It's been fixed for 2.7 and 3.2. Until then, you'll need to work
around it. You can either append a newline to the end of any source
snippets that you are exec-ing, or if you're writing the code snippets
that are being exec-ed yourself, don't write them in such a way that
they trigger the bug.
--
Jerry