Monday, May 28, 2007

What is exception handling?

When an exception occurs, the system searches for the nearest catch clause that can handle the exception, as determined by the run-time type of the exception. First, the current method is searched for a lexically enclosing try statement, and the associated catch clauses of the try statement are considered in order. If that fails, the method that called the current method is searched for a lexically enclosing try statement that encloses the point of the call to the current method. This search continues until a catch clause is found that can handle the current exception, by naming an exception class that is of the same class, or a base class, of the run-time type of the exception being thrown. A catch clause that doesn’t name an exception class can handle any exception. Once a matching catch clause is found, the system prepares to transfer control to the first statement of the catch clause. Before execution of the catch clause begins, the system first executes, in order, any finally clauses that were associated with try statements more nested that than the one that caught the exception. Exceptions that occur during destructor execution are worth special mention. If an exception occurs during destructor execution, and that exception is not caught, then the execution of that destructor is terminated and the destructor of the base class (if any) is called. If there is no base class (as in the case of the object type) or if there is no base class destructor, then the exception is discarded.

In the code below

int i;

i = 10;

int j = 0;

try

{

i = i++;

Response.Write(i.ToString());

j = i;

}

catch (Exception e)

{

i = 100;

}

finally

{

i = -1;

}

Response.Write(i.ToString());

After the error the control will execute the catch block and then the finally block.

In the code below:

protected void Page_Load(object sender, EventArgs e)

{

try

{

foo();

}

catch (Exception e1)

{

Response.Write(e1.Message);

}

}

private void foo()

{

int i;

i = 10;

int j = 0;

try

{

i = i++;

Response.Write(i.ToString());

j = i;

}

finally

{

i = -1;

}

Response.Write(i.ToString());

}

After the error the control will execute the finally block and then the catch block.

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