Try-Catch-Finally

Using try and catch

Try is used to guard a block of code in which exception may occur. This block of code is called guarded region. A catch statement involves declaring the type of exception you are trying to catch. If an exception occurs in guarded code, the catch block that follows the try is checked, if the type of exception that occured is listed in the catch block then the exception is handed over to the catch block which then handles it.

Example using Try and catch

class Excp
{
 public static void main(String args[])
 {
  int a,b,c;
  try
  {
   a=0;
   b=10;
   c=b/a;
   System.out.println("This line will not be executed");
  }
  catch(ArithmeticException e)
  {
   System.out.println("Divided by zero"); 
  }
  System.out.println("After exception is handled");
 }
}
Output :
Divided by zero
After exception is handled
An exception will thrown by this program as we are trying to divide a number by zero inside try block. The program control is transfered outside try block. Thus the line "This line will not be executed" is never parsed by the compiler. The exception thrown is handle in catch block. Once the exception is handled the program controls continue with the next line in the program. Thus the line "After exception is handled" is printed.

Multiple catch blocks:

A try block can be followed by multiple catch blocks. You can have any number of catch blocks after a single try block.If an exception occurs in the guarded code the exception is passed to the first catch block in the list. If the exception type of exception, matches with the first catch block it gets caught, if not the exception is passed down to the next catch block. This continue until the exception is caught or falls through all catches.

Example for Multiple Catch blocks

class Excep
{
 public static void main(String[] args)
 {
  try
  {
   int arr[]={1,2};
   arr[2]=3/0;
  } 
  catch(ArithmeticException ae)
  {
   System.out.println("divide by zero");
  }
  catch(ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException e)
  {
   System.out.println("array index out of bound exception");
  }
 }
}
Output :
divide by zero

Example for Unreachable Catch block

While using multiple catch statements, it is important to remember that exception sub classes inside catchmust come before any of their super classes otherwise it will lead to compile time error.
class Excep
{
 public static void main(String[] args)
 {
  try
  {
   int arr[]={1,2};
   arr[2]=3/0;
  }
  catch(Exception e)    //This block handles all Exception
  {
   System.out.println("Generic exception");
  }
  catch(ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException e)    //This block is unreachable
  {
   System.out.println("array index out of bound exception");
  }
 }
}

Nested try statement

try statement can be nested inside another block of try. Nested try block is used when a part of a block may cause one error while entire block may cause another error. In case if inner try block does not have a catchhandler for a particular exception then the outer try is checked for match.
class Excep
{
 public static void main(String[] args)
 {
  try
  {
   int arr[]={5,0,1,2};
   try
   {
    int x=arr[3]/arr[1];
   }
   catch(ArithmeticException ae)
   {
    System.out.println("divide by zero");
   }
   arr[4]=3;
  }
  catch(ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException e)
  {
   System.out.println("array index out of bound exception");
  }
 }
}

Important points to Remember

  1. If you do not explicitly use the try catch blocks in your program, java will provide a default exception handler, which will print the exception details on the terminal, whenever exception occurs.
  2. Super class Throwable overrides toString() function, to display error message in form of string.
  3. While using multiple catch block, always make sure that exception subclasses comes before any of their super classes. Else you will get compile time error.
  4. In nested try catch, the inner try block, uses its own catch block as well as catch block of the outer try, if required.
  5. Only the object of Throwable class or its subclasses can be thrown.

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