WWW Tutorialspoint Com Java Java - Exceptions HTM PDF
WWW Tutorialspoint Com Java Java - Exceptions HTM PDF
Java - Exceptions
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An exception (or exceptional event) is a problem that arises during the execution of a program. When an Exception
occurs the normal flow of the program is disrupted and the program/Application terminates abnormally, which is not
recommended, therefore, these exceptions are to be handled.
An exception can occur for many different reasons. Following are some scenarios where an exception occurs.
A network connection has been lost in the middle of communications or the JVM has run out of memory.
Some of these exceptions are caused by user error, others by programmer error, and others by physical resources
that have failed in some manner.
Based on these, we have three categories of Exceptions. You need to understand them to know how exception
handling works in Java.
Checked exceptions − A checked exception is an exception that is checked (notified) by the compiler at
compilation-time, these are also called as compile time exceptions. These exceptions cannot simply be
ignored, the programmer should take care of (handle) these exceptions.
For example, if you use FileReader class in your program to read data from a file, if the file specified in its
constructor doesn't exist, then a FileNotFoundException occurs, and the compiler prompts the programmer to
handle the exception.
Example
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Live Demo
import java.io.File;
import java.io.FileReader; Accept
If you try to compile the above program, you will get the following exceptions.
Output
C:\>javac FilenotFound_Demo.java
FilenotFound_Demo.java:8: error: unreported exception FileNotFoundException; must be caught or declared t
FileReader fr = new FileReader(file);
^
1 error
Note − Since the methods read() and close() of FileReader class throws IOException, you can observe that the
compiler notifies to handle IOException, along with FileNotFoundException.
Unchecked exceptions − An unchecked exception is an exception that occurs at the time of execution.
These are also called as Runtime Exceptions. These include programming bugs, such as logic errors or
improper use of an API. Runtime exceptions are ignored at the time of compilation.
For example, if you have declared an array of size 5 in your program, and trying to call the 6th element of the array
then an ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsExceptionexception occurs.
Example
Live Demo
public class Unchecked_Demo {
If you compile and execute the above program, you will get the following exception.
Output
Exception in thread "main" java.lang.ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException: 5
at Exceptions.Unchecked_Demo.main(Unchecked_Demo.java:8)
Errors − These are not exceptions at all, but problems that arise beyond the control of the user or the
programmer. Errors are typically ignored in your code because you can rarely do anything about an error.
For example, if a stack overflow occurs, an error will arise. They are also ignored at the time of compilation.
Exception Hierarchy
All exception classes are subtypes of the java.lang.Exception class. The exception class is a subclass of the
Throwable class. Other than the exception class there is another subclass called Error which is derived from the
Throwable class.
Errors are abnormal conditions that happen in case of severe failures, these are not handled by the Java programs.
Errors are generated to indicate errors generated by the runtime environment. Example: JVM is out of memory.
Normally, programs cannot recover from errors.
The Exception class has two main subclasses: IOException class and RuntimeException Class.
Following is a list of most common checked and unchecked Java's Built-in Exceptions .
Exceptions Methods
Following is the list of important methods available in the Throwable class.
1 Returns a detailed message about the exception that has occurred. This message is initialized in the
Throwable constructor.
5 Returns an array containing each element on the stack trace. The element at index 0 represents the top
of the call stack, and the last element in the array represents the method at the bottom of the call stack.
Catching Exceptions
A method catches an exception using a combination of the try and catch keywords. A try/catch block is placed
around the code that might generate an exception. Code within a try/catch block is referred to as protected code,
and the syntax for using try/catch looks like the following −
Syntax
try {
// Protected code
} catch (ExceptionName e1) {
// Catch block
}
The code which is prone to exceptions is placed in the try block. When an exception occurs, that exception occurred
is handled by catch block associated with it. Every try block should be immediately followed either by a catch block
or finally block.
A catch statement involves declaring the type of exception you are trying to catch. If an exception occurs in protected
code, the catch block (or blocks) that follows the try is checked. If the type of exception that occurred is listed in a
catch block, the exception is passed to the catch block much as an argument is passed into a method parameter.
Example
The following is an array declared with 2 elements. Then the code tries to access the 3rd element of the array which
throws an exception.
Live Demo
// File Name : ExcepTest.java
import java.io.*;
Output
Exception thrown :java.lang.ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException: 3
Out of the block
Syntax
try {
// Protected code
} catch (ExceptionType1 e1) {
// Catch block
} catch (ExceptionType2 e2) {
// Catch block
} catch (ExceptionType3 e3) {
// Catch block
}
The previous statements demonstrate three catch blocks, but you can have any number of them after a single try. If
an exception occurs in the protected code, the exception is thrown to the first catch block in the list. If the data type
of the exception thrown matches ExceptionType1, it gets caught there. If not, the exception passes down to the
second catch statement. This continues until the exception either is caught or falls through all catches, in which case
the current method stops execution and the exception is thrown down to the previous method on the call stack.
Example
Here is code segment showing how to use multiple try/catch statements.
try {
file = new FileInputStream(fileName);
x = (byte) file.read();
} catch (IOException i) {
i.printStackTrace();
return -1;
} catch (FileNotFoundException f) // Not valid! {
f.printStackTrace();
return -1;
}
You can throw an exception, either a newly instantiated one or an exception that you just caught, by using the throw
keyword.
Try to understand the difference between throws and throw keywords, throws is used to postpone the handling of a
checked exception and throw is used to invoke an exception explicitly.
The following method declares that it throws a RemoteException −
Example
import java.io.*;
public class className {
A method can declare that it throws more than one exception, in which case the exceptions are declared in a list
separated by commas. For example, the following method declares that it throws a RemoteException and an
InsufficientFundsException −
Example
import java.io.*;
public class className {
Using a finally block allows you to run any cleanup-type statements that you want to execute, no matter what
happens in the protected code.
A finally block appears at the end of the catch blocks and has the following syntax −
Syntax
try {
// Protected code
} catch (ExceptionType1 e1) {
// Catch block
} catch (ExceptionType2 e2) {
// Catch block
} catch (ExceptionType3 e3) {
// Catch block
}finally {
// The finally block always executes.
}
Example
public class ExcepTest { Live Demo
Output
Exception thrown :java.lang.ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException: 3
First element value: 6
The finally statement is executed
The try block cannot be present without either catch clause or finally clause.
Any code cannot be present in between the try, catch, finally blocks.
The try-with-resources
Generally, when we use any resources like streams, connections, etc. we have to close them explicitly using finally
block. In the following program, we are reading data from a file using FileReader and we are closing it using finally
block.
Example
import java.io.File;
import java.io.FileReader;
import java.io.IOException;
try-with-resources, also referred as automatic resource management, is a new exception handling mechanism
that was introduced in Java 7, which automatically closes the resources used within the try catch block.
To use this statement, you simply need to declare the required resources within the parenthesis, and the created
resource will be closed automatically at the end of the block. Following is the syntax of try-with-resources statement.
Syntax
try(FileReader fr = new FileReader("file path")) {
// use the resource
} catch () {
// body of catch
}
}
Following is the program that reads the data in a file using try-with-resources statement.
Example
import java.io.FileReader;
import java.io.IOException;
Following points are to be kept in mind while working with try-with-resources statement.
To use a class with try-with-resources statement it should implement AutoCloseable interface and the
close() method of it gets invoked automatically at runtime.
While you declare multiple classes in the try block of try-with-resources statement these classes are closed
in reverse order.
Except the declaration of resources within the parenthesis everything is the same as normal try/catch block
of a try block.
The resource declared in try gets instantiated just before the start of the try-block.
If you want to write a checked exception that is automatically enforced by the Handle or Declare Rule, you
need to extend the Exception class.
If you want to write a runtime exception, you need to extend the RuntimeException class.
You just need to extend the predefined Exception class to create your own Exception. These are considered to be
checked exceptions. The following InsufficientFundsException class is a user-defined exception that extends the
Exception class, making it a checked exception. An exception class is like any other class, containing useful fields
and methods.
Example
To demonstrate using our user-defined exception, the following CheckingAccount class contains a withdraw()
method that throws an InsufficientFundsException.
The following BankDemo program demonstrates invoking the deposit() and withdraw() methods of
CheckingAccount.
try {
System.out.println("\nWithdrawing $100...");
c.withdraw(100.00);
System.out.println("\nWithdrawing $600...");
c.withdraw(600.00);
} catch (InsufficientFundsException e) {
System.out.println("Sorry, but you are short $" + e.getAmount());
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
}
Compile all the above three files and run BankDemo. This will produce the following result −
Output
Depositing $500...
Withdrawing $100...
Withdrawing $600...
Sorry, but you are short $200.0
InsufficientFundsException
at CheckingAccount.withdraw(CheckingAccount.java:25)
at BankDemo.main(BankDemo.java:13)
Common Exceptions
In Java, it is possible to define two catergories of Exceptions and Errors.
JVM Exceptions − These are exceptions/errors that are exclusively or logically thrown by the JVM.
Examples: NullPointerException, ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException, ClassCastException.
Programmatic Exceptions − These exceptions are thrown explicitly by the application or the API
programmers. Examples: IllegalArgumentException, IllegalStateException.
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