Python logging filters do not propagate like handlers and levels dohttps://www.saltycrane.com/blog/2014/02/python-logging-filters-do-not-propagate-like-handlers-and-levels-do/#comments2016-03-04T13:00:35-08:00Comment by Aaron Ross
2016-03-04T13:00:35-08:00https://www.saltycrane.com/comments/cr/18/382/#c130984
<p>Whee, I was sooo confused! Thanks for posting. I wonder what the motivation
was for the difference in propagation? Must be some interesting use case I'm
missing.</p>
<p>disqus:2551167112</p>
Comment by Eliot
2016-02-24T07:49:00-08:00https://www.saltycrane.com/comments/cr/18/382/#c130978
<p>Thanks for bringing that to my attention. I fixed the styling for that link.</p>
<p>disqus:2532217740</p>
Comment by Burrito
2016-02-12T19:15:14-08:00https://www.saltycrane.com/comments/cr/18/382/#c130975
<p>Thanks for the tip.</p>
<p>A suggestion for the styling on this website: Make your links actually look
like links. I had to hover over "the logging flowchart" to know whether it is
clickable.</p>
<p>disqus:2510386934</p>
Comment by Vinay Sajip
2014-03-03T14:04:31-08:00https://www.saltycrane.com/comments/cr/18/382/#c103724
<p>Levels on handlers don't propagate, either. The concept of an effective level (use an ancestor's level if none is set for the current instance) applies only to loggers.</p>