For example, running an operation that saves a file
(e.g. tf.train.Saver.save)
could potentially raise this exception if an explicit filename for an
existing file was passed.
Attributes
error_code
The integer error code that describes the error.
message
The error message that describes the error.
node_def
The NodeDef proto representing the op that failed.
[null,null,["Last updated 2020-10-01 UTC."],[],[],null,["# tf.errors.AlreadyExistsError\n\n\u003cbr /\u003e\n\n|-----------------------------------------------------------------------|-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|\n| [TensorFlow 2 version](/api_docs/python/tf/errors/AlreadyExistsError) | [View source on GitHub](https://github.com/tensorflow/tensorflow/blob/v1.15.0/tensorflow/python/framework/errors_impl.py#L305-L319) |\n\nRaised when an entity that we attempted to create already exists.\n\nInherits From: [`OpError`](../../tf/errors/OpError)\n\n#### View aliases\n\n\n**Compat aliases for migration**\n\nSee\n[Migration guide](https://www.tensorflow.org/guide/migrate) for\nmore details.\n\n[`tf.compat.v1.errors.AlreadyExistsError`](/api_docs/python/tf/errors/AlreadyExistsError), \\`tf.compat.v2.errors.AlreadyExistsError\\`\n\n\u003cbr /\u003e\n\n tf.errors.AlreadyExistsError(\n node_def, op, message\n )\n\nFor example, running an operation that saves a file\n(e.g. [`tf.train.Saver.save`](../../tf/train/Saver#save))\ncould potentially raise this exception if an explicit filename for an\nexisting file was passed.\n\n\u003cbr /\u003e\n\n\u003cbr /\u003e\n\n\u003cbr /\u003e\n\n| Attributes ---------- ||\n|--------------|-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|\n| `error_code` | The integer error code that describes the error. |\n| `message` | The error message that describes the error. |\n| `node_def` | The `NodeDef` proto representing the op that failed. |\n| `op` | The operation that failed, if known. \u003cbr /\u003e | **Note:** If the failed op was synthesized at runtime, e.g. a `Send` or `Recv` op, there will be no corresponding [`tf.Operation`](../../tf/Operation) object. In that case, this will return `None`, and you should instead use the [`tf.errors.OpError.node_def`](../../tf/errors/OpError#node_def) to discover information about the op. |"]]