reference: Java Doc
Exception is short for "exceptional event".
When an error occurs within a method, the method creates an object and hands it off to the runtime system. The object, called an exception object, contains information about the error, including its type and the state of the program when the error occurred. Creating an exception object and handing it to the runtime system is called throwing an exception.
The runtime system searches the call stack for a method that contains a block of code that can handle the exception. This block of code is called an exception handler.
Checked Exception
These are exceptional conditions that a well-written application should anticipate and recover from.
Example, java.io.FileNotFoundException
Checked exceptions are subject to the Catch or Specify Requirement. All exceptions are checked exceptions, except for those indicated by Error
, RuntimeException
, and their subclasses.
Error
These are exceptional conditions that are external to the application, and that the application usually cannot anticipate or recover from.
Example, java.io.IOError
Runtime Exception
These are exceptional conditions that are internal to the application, and that the application usually cannot anticipate or recover from.
These usually indicate programming bugs, such as logic errors or improper use of an API.
Example, NullPointerException
Errors and runtime exceptions are collectively known as unchecked exceptions.
Try block: Identifies a block of code in which an exception can occur.
Catch block: Identifies a block of code, known as an exception handler, that can handle a particular type of exception.
Finally block: Identifies a block of code that is guaranteed to execute, and is the right place to close files, recover resources, and otherwise clean up after the code enclosed in the try
block.
The finally
block always executes when the try
block exits. This ensures that the finally
block is executed even if an unexpected exception occurs.
The runtime system always executes the statements within thefinally
block regardless of what happens within the try
block. So it's the perfect place to perform cleanup.
For example, the try block of the writeList method that you've been working with here opens a PrintWriter. The program should close that stream before exiting the writeList method. This poses a somewhat complicated problem because writeList's try block can exit in one of three ways.
1. The new FileWriter statement fails and throws an IOException.
2. The list.get(i) statement fails and throws an IndexOutOfBoundsException.
3. Everything succeeds and the try block exits normally.
1. Separating Error-Handling Code from "Regular" Code
2. Propagating Errors Up the Call Stack
3. Grouping and Differentiating Error Types