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Home/ Questions/Q 537233
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T09:54:19+00:00 2026-05-13T09:54:19+00:00

import sys def a(): print ‘aaa’ def profiler(frame, event, arg): print event, frame.f_code.co_name, frame.f_lineno,

  • 0
import sys
def a():
    print 'aaa'
def profiler(frame, event, arg):
    print event, frame.f_code.co_name, frame.f_lineno, "->", arg

# profiler is activated on the next call, return, or exception
sys.setprofile(profiler)
a()

print

call a 5 -> None#what is it
aaa
return a 6 -> None#what is it 
return <module> 12 -> None#what is it 

why print this.

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T09:54:20+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 9:54 am

    The profiler function gets called at each profiling event because you called sys.setprofile on it.

    Each time it’s called, it prints a line, because you put an unconditional print statement as its body. Why you did that, is hard for us to tell you, making your “why” questions really, truly peculiar.

    Profiling events are just calls and returns, per the docs:

    'call'
    

    A function is called (or some other
    code block entered).

    'return'
    

    A function (or other code block) is
    about to return.

    'c_call'
    

    A C function is about to be called.
    This may be an extension function or a
    built-in.

    'c_return'
    

    A C function has returned.

    Here’s what I observe (Python 2.5 or 2.6, MacOSX) in a slightly simpler, sharper case:

    >>> def a():
    ...     print 'aaa'
    ... 
    >>> def profiler(frame, event, arg):
    ...     print 'PROF %r %r' % (event, arg)
    ... 
    >>> sys.setprofile(profiler)
    PROF 'return' None
    >>> a()
    PROF 'call' None
    PROF 'c_call' <built-in function utf_8_decode>
    PROF 'c_return' <built-in function utf_8_decode>
    PROF 'return' (u'a()\n', 4)
    PROF 'call' None
    PROF 'call' None
    aaa
    PROF 'return' None
    PROF 'return' None
    

    Not sure why you don’t see the c_call and c_return cases as you should — maybe there is no implicit utf-8 conversion for printing in your specific platform (what OS? what level of Python? what IDE if any).

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