stdnum.exceptions¶
Collection of exceptions.
The validation functions of stdnum should raise one of the below exceptions when validation of the number fails.
The exceptions are organised hierarchically in the following structure:
ValidationError
 +-- InvalidFormat
 |    +-- InvalidLength
 +-- InvalidChecksum
 +-- InvalidComponent
It is possible to change the exception messages by setting the message class property. This allows localisation and application-specific error messages.
>>> raise InvalidFormat()
Traceback (most recent call last):
    ...
InvalidChecksum: The number has an invalid format.
>>> InvalidFormat.message = 'UNKNOWN'
>>> raise InvalidFormat()
Traceback (most recent call last):
    ...
InvalidChecksum: UNKNOWN
- 
exception stdnum.exceptions.ValidationError¶
- Bases: - Exception- Top-level error for validating numbers. - This exception should normally not be raised, only subclasses of this exception. 
- 
exception stdnum.exceptions.InvalidFormat¶
- Bases: - stdnum.exceptions.ValidationError- Something is wrong with the format of the number. - This generally means characters or delimiters that are not allowed are part of the number or required parts are missing. 
- 
exception stdnum.exceptions.InvalidChecksum¶
- Bases: - stdnum.exceptions.ValidationError- The number’s internal checksum or check digit does not match. 
- 
exception stdnum.exceptions.InvalidLength¶
- Bases: - stdnum.exceptions.InvalidFormat- The length of the number is wrong. 
- 
exception stdnum.exceptions.InvalidComponent¶
- Bases: - stdnum.exceptions.ValidationError- One of the parts of the number has an invalid reference. - Some part of the number refers to some external entity like a country code, a date or a predefined collection of values. The number contains some invalid reference.