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Exceptions and Exception Handling (continued) Carl Alphonce CSE116
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Intermediate Java Exceptions and flow-of-control When an exception is thrown, the regular flow of control is interrupted. Invocation records are popped from runtime stack until an exception handler is found. Because of this, code in a method after a “throw” is not executed if the throw occurs.
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Intermediate Java Example public int someMethod() { stmt1; stmt2; if (x<=0) { throw new Exception(); } stmt3; return x; }
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Intermediate Java Example (if x > 0) public int someMethod() { stmt1; stmt2; if (x<=0) { throw new Exception(); } stmt3; return x; }
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Intermediate Java Example (if x <= 0) public int someMethod() { stmt1; stmt2; if (x<=0) { throw new Exception(); } stmt3; return x; }
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Intermediate Java Catching an exception If you want to catch an exception, you must indicate: from which segment of code you are prepared to handle an exception which exception(s) you are going to handle You can also: include a “cleanup” case to release resources acquired, regardless of whether an exception was thrown
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Intermediate Java The try block To indicate the segment of code from which you are prepared to handle an exception, place it in a try block: stmt1; try { stmt2; stmt3; } stmt4;
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Intermediate Java A catch block A catch block is an exception handler for a specific type of exception: try { // code that may throw exception } catch (Exception e) { // code to handle exception }
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Intermediate Java Multiple catch blocks Can place many catch blocks (exception handlers) after a try block: try { // code that may throw exception } catch (IndexOutOfBoundsException e) { // code to handle an index out of bounds exception } catch (MalformedURLException e) { // code to handle a malformed URL exception } catch (Exception e) { // code to handle a general exception }
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Intermediate Java Recall there is an exception hierarchy: Here’s part of the hierarchy: Exception IOException FileNotFoundException MalformedURLException RuntimeException IndexOutOfBoundsException NullPointerException
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Intermediate Java Catch block ordering: specific to general Catch blocks are tried in the order they are written: try { // code that may throw exception } catch (IndexOutOfBoundsException e) { // code to handle index out of bounds exception } catch (RuntimeException e) { // code to handle runtime exception } catch (Exception e) { // code to handle any other exception }
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Intermediate Java Now consider a slightly different part of the hierarchy: Here’s part of the hierarchy: Exception IOException FileNotFoundException MalformedURLException RuntimeException IndexOutOfBoundsException NullPointerException
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Intermediate Java Catch block ordering: general to specific? Catch blocks are tried in the order they are written: try { // code that may throw exception } catch (Exception e) { // code to handle any exception } catch (RuntimeException e) { // code to handle a runtime exception // this is never reached! } catch (IndexOutOfBoundsException e) { // code to handle index out of bounds exception // this is never reached! }
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Intermediate Java Finally clause Optional Used to release resources back to OS Shared resources are often acquired inside a try block (e.g. a file is opened for writing) These resources must be released (e.g. the file must be closed so some other piece of code can use it): if an exception is NOT thrown in the try block if an exception IS thrown in the try block
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Intermediate Java Flow of control: no exception is thrown // some code try { // code that may throw exception } catch (IndexOutOfBoundsException e) { // code to handle index out of bounds exception } catch (RuntimeException e) { // code to handle runtime exception } catch (MalformedURLException e) { // code to handle malformed URL exception } finally { // cleanup code } // more code
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Intermediate Java Flow of control: handled exception (e.g. RuntimeException) is thrown // some code try { // code that throws a RuntimeException } catch (IndexOutOfBoundsException e) { // code to handle index out of bounds exception } catch (RuntimeException e) { // code to handle runtime exception } catch (MalformedURLException e) { // code to handle malformed URL exception } finally { // cleanup code } // more code
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Intermediate Java Flow of control: unhandled exception (e.g. FileNotFoundException) is thrown // some code try { // code that throws a RuntimeException } catch (IndexOutOfBoundsException e) { // code to handle index out of bounds exception } catch (RuntimeException e) { // code to handle runtime exception } catch (MalformedURLException e) { // code to handle malformed URL exception } finally { // cleanup code } // more code
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Intermediate Java Defining your own exception classes Since exceptions are just objects derived from the type java.util.Exception, you can define your own. There are *many* predefined exceptions – one will likely meet your needs. To define your own:
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Intermediate Java An example of an exception class public class IllegalStateException extends RuntimeException { public IllegalStateException() { super(); } public IllegalStateException(String s) { super(s); } public IllegalStateException(String message, Throwable cause) { super(message, cause); } public IllegalStateException(Throwable cause) { super(cause); }
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