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Exceptions

Exceptions. Syntax, semantics, and pragmatics. Syntax, semantics, pragmatics. Syntax How it looks, i.e. how we have to program to satisfy the compiler. Semantics What it means / how it works Pragmatics How to use it in the proper way. Introduction.

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Exceptions

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  1. Exceptions Syntax, semantics, and pragmatics Exceptions

  2. Syntax, semantics, pragmatics • Syntax • How it looks, i.e. how we have to program to satisfy the compiler. • Semantics • What it means / how it works • Pragmatics • How to use it in the proper way. Exceptions

  3. Introduction • Exceptions are a part of the Java programming language • And other programming languages like C++, C#, etc. • Exception related keywords in Java • throw, throws, try … catch … finally Exceptions

  4. More syntax: Multi catch • General try … catch • try { do something dangerous} • catch (SomeException ex) { handle the exception} • Multi catch • Java 7 feature Catch (SomeExceptionType|SomeOtherExceptionType ex) { Handle exception} • Useful if you want the same handling for different exceptions Exceptions

  5. Exception classes Exceptions

  6. Exception class hierarchy • The class hierarchy can get quite deep • java.lang.Object • java.lang.Throwable • java.lang.Exception • java.sql.SQLException • java.ql.SQLWarning • More detailed exceptions • More detailed information on the problem • More detailed handling of the problem Exceptions

  7. Checked vs. runtime exceptions • Checked exceptions • Extends Exception, directly or indirectly. • Must be caught or declared to be thrown • This is checked by the compiler • Called the “Catch or specify requirement” • http://download.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/essential/exceptions/catchOrDeclare.html • Can usually be recovered from at runtime • Run-time exceptions • Extends RuntimeException, directly or indirectly • Can be caught or declared to be thrown • This is not checked by the compiler • Can usually not be recovered from at runtime Exceptions

  8. The class Error • By convention the class Error is reserved for use by the JVM to indicate problems in the JVM. • Don’t ever subclass Error • Don’t ever throw an Error • Unless you are programming a JVM, of course! Exceptions

  9. What happens when an exception is thrown? • When an exception is thrown the current block ({…}) is popped of the call stack • This popping continues until some block has a catch clause. • If no block has a catch clause we will eventually end in main, which is then popped • And the program stops. Exceptions

  10. Sequence of catch blocks • If a block has more than one catch block the first catch block, that matches the exception type, is executed. • General rule: • Special exception must be caught beforegeneral exceptions Try { … } catch (FileNotFoundException ex) { …} catch (IOException ex) { …} Exceptions

  11. Different kinds of exception handling • Ignore • Usually a bad programming habit used by 1st semester students to make the compiler shut up! • Handle • Only handle the exception if you really can. • Just printing something to the screen is usually a bad idea, except if you are in the user interface layer. • Re-throw • If you don’t know how to deal with the exception re-throw it. • Partly handle + re-throw • Sometimes you want to partly handle the exception for example write to a log file, and then re-throw the exception. Exceptions

  12. Finally • The finally block is executed whether or not an exception is thrown. • Leaving the method you always execute the finally block • Used to release resources • Example: Closing a connection to a network, database, or file • Coding idiom: FileReader input = null; try { … open input and use it … } finally { if (input != null) { input.close(); } } Example: java7exceptionfeatures Exceptions

  13. Try with resource statement • Java 7 language feature • The coding idiom • Declare … try { open + use } finally {close } • Is now supported in the Java programming language • New syntax • Try (open + initialize) { use } • The resource must implement the java.lang.AutoCloseable interface • Finally is no longer necessary in this case • Example: java7exceptionfeatures • Further readings + examples • The Java Tutorial • http://download.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/essential/exceptions/tryResourceClose.html Exceptions

  14. Program your own exception • Why? • Technical exceptions like IOException, SQLException, etc. should not be propagated to the model layer. • Instead you must define your own application specific exception like LibraryException • Example: eventLayersExceptions • How? That’s very easy! • Define a new class which extends the class Exception • You probably need to define 3 constructors. • Your exception class may have data + methods • But you probably never need it. • NetBeans can assist you. Exceptions

  15. Item 57: Use exceptions only for exceptional conditions • Don’t loop over a collection until it throws an exception. • A well-designed API must not force the users to use exception for ordinary control flow Exceptions

  16. Item 58: Checked exceptions vs. run-time exceptions • Use checked exceptions for recoverable conditions and run-time exceptions for programming errors • Use checked exception for conditions form which the call can reasonably be expected to recover. • Use run-time exceptions to indicate programming error • The caller (programmer) made an error • Most likely a violation the methods precondition • Examples: IndexOutOfBoundException, NullPointerException Exceptions

  17. Item 59: Avoid unnecessary use of checked exceptions • If the caller cannot handle the exception, then throw a run-time exception. • Provide check methods • Example: StringTokenizer.hasMoreElements() Exceptions

  18. Item 60: Favor the use of standard exceptions • Don’t use a home-made exception if you can use a standard exception. • Specially with run-time exceptions. • Reusable standard run-time exceptions • IllegalArgumentException • IllegalStateException • NullPointerException • IndexOutOfBoundsException • UnsupporteOperationException Exceptions

  19. Item 61: Throw exceptions appropriate to the abstraction • Higher layers should catch lower-level exceptions and throw exceptions appropriate for the higher level • Exception translation • Catch (LowLevelException ex) { throw new HighLevelException(message); } • Exception chaining • Catch (LowLevelException ex) { throw new HighLevelException(ex); } • The LowLevelException is “inside” the HighLevelException • New in Java 1.4: New constructor in class Throwable Exceptions

  20. Item 62: Document all exceptions thrown by each method • For all your methods • Document (using the Javadoc @throws tag) all the exceptions the method might throw • Including unchecked exceptions. • NetBeans can assist you • Mainly with checked exceptions. • Don’t forget the run-time exceptions. Exceptions

  21. Item 63: Include failure-capture information in detail message • The message in the exception is the only information the receiver gets. • The message in the exception should include all values that “contributed” to the exception • Example • throw new IllegalArgumentException(“….” + parameter) Exceptions

  22. Item 64: Strive for failure atomicity • A failed method should invocation should leave the object in the state that it was prior to invocation. • Easier to recover from exception. Exceptions

  23. Item 65: Don’t ignore exceptions • An empty catch block is highly suspicious • If you really mean it, then write a comment in the empty catch block. • In JUnit test you sometimes see an empty catch block • But even here you can improve catch (SomeException ex) { assertEquals(“….”, ex.getMessage(); } Exceptions

  24. References • Ken Arnold et al.: The Java Programming Language, 4th edition, Addison Wesley, 2006 • Chapter 12: Exceptions and Assertions, page 279-303 • Joshua Bloch: Effective Java, 2nd edition, Addison Wesley, 2008 • Chapter 9: Exceptions, page 241-258 Exceptions

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