Make close() (all versions) ignore IOError from flush().

This makes test_resource.py pass, and I think it's the right thing
to do: if you're closing a file after encountering an I/O error
there's nothing you can do about it.  If you want the error, you
can call flush() yourself.
This commit is contained in:
Guido van Rossum 2007-07-22 20:38:07 +00:00
parent ca73d496ec
commit 33e7a8e813

View file

@ -229,8 +229,9 @@ class IOBase:
if not self.__closed:
try:
self.flush()
finally:
self.__closed = True
except IOError:
pass # If flush() fails, just give up
self.__closed = True
def __del__(self) -> None:
"""Destructor. Calls close()."""
@ -598,7 +599,10 @@ class _BufferedIOMixin(BufferedIOBase):
def close(self):
if not self.closed:
self.flush()
try:
self.flush()
except IOError:
pass # If flush() fails, just give up
self.raw.close()
### Inquiries ###
@ -1048,7 +1052,10 @@ class TextIOWrapper(TextIOBase):
self._telling = self._seekable
def close(self):
self.flush()
try:
self.flush()
except:
pass # If flush() fails, just give up
self.buffer.close()
@property