throw
So far, you have only been
catching exceptions that are thrown by the Java run-time system. However, it is
possible for your program to throw an exception explicitly, using the throw statement. The general form of throw is shown here:
throw ThrowableInstance;
Here, ThrowableInstance must be an object of type Throwable or a subclass of Throwable.
Primitive types, such as int or char, as well as non-Throwable classes, such as String and Object, cannot be used as exceptions. There are two ways you can
obtain a Throwable object: using a
parameter in a catch clause or
creating one with the new operator.
The flow of execution stops
immediately after the throw
statement; any subsequent statements are not executed. The nearest enclosing try block is inspected to see if it has
a catch statement that matches the
type of exception. If it does find a match, control is
transferred to that
statement. If not, then the next enclosing try
statement is inspected, and so on. If no matching catch is found, then the default exception handler halts the
program and prints the stack trace.
Here is a sample program that
creates and throws an exception. The handler that catches the exception
rethrows it to the outer handler.
// Demonstrate throw.
class ThrowDemo {
static void demoproc() { try {
throw new
NullPointerException("demo");
} catch(NullPointerException e) {
System.out.println("Caught inside demoproc."); throw e; // rethrow
the exception
}
}
public static void main(String args[]) { try {
demoproc();
} catch(NullPointerException e) {
System.out.println("Recaught: " + e);
}
}
}
This program gets two chances
to deal with the same error. First, main(
) sets up an exception context and then calls demoproc( ). The demoproc( )
method then sets up another exception-handling context and immediately throws a
new instance of NullPointerException,
which is caught on the next line. The exception is then rethrown. Here is the resulting output:
Caught inside demoproc.
Recaught: java.lang.NullPointerException: demo
The program also illustrates
how to create one of Java’s standard exception objects. Pay close attention to
this line:
throw new
NullPointerException("demo");
Here, new is used to construct an instance of NullPointerException. Many of Java’s built-in run-time exceptions have at least two constructors: one with no parameter and one that takes a string parameter. When the second form is used, the argument specifies a string that describes the exception. This string is displayed when the object is used as an argument to print( ) or println( ). It can also be obtained by a call to getMessage( ), which is defined by Throwable.
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