C++ Exceptions
Exceptions
As mentioned in the C++ Errors chapter, different types of errors can occur while running a program - such as coding mistakes, invalid input, or unexpected situations.
When an error occurs, C++ will normally stop and generate an error message. The technical term for this is: C++ will throw an exception (throw an error).
Exception Handling (try and catch)
Exception handling lets you catch and handle errors during runtime - so your program doesn't crash.
It uses three keywords:
try- defines the code to testthrow- triggers an exceptioncatch- handles the error
Example
try {
// Code that may throw an exception
throw 505;
}
catch (int errorCode) {
cout << "Error occurred: " <<
errorCode;
}
Here, the program throws an exception with the value
505, which is caught and handled in the catch block.
Real-Life Example: Age Check
We can use exception handling to check if a user is old enough:
Example
try {
int age = 15;
if (age >= 18) {
cout << "Access granted - you are old enough.";
} else {
throw (age);
}
}
catch (int
myNum) {
cout << "Access denied - You must be at least 18 years
old.\n";
cout << "Age is: " << myNum;
}
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Example explained
We use the try block to test some code: If the age variable is less than 18, we will throw an exception, and handle it in our catch block.
In the catch block, we catch the error and
do something about it. The catch
statement takes a parameter: in our example we use an int variable (myNum) (because we are throwing an exception of int type in the try block (age)),
to output the value of age.
If no error occurs (e.g. if age is 20 instead of 15,
meaning it will be be greater
than 18), the catch block is skipped:
You can also use the throw keyword to output a reference number, like a
custom error number/code for organizing purposes (505 in our example):
Example
try {
int age = 15;
if (age >= 18) {
cout << "Access granted - you are old enough.";
} else {
throw 505;
}
}
catch (int myNum) {
cout << "Access denied - You must be at least 18 years old.\n";
cout << "Error number: " << myNum;
}
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Handle Any Type of Exceptions (...)
If you do not know the throw type used in the try block, you can use the "three dots" syntax (...) inside the catch block, which will handle any type of exception:
Example
try {
int age = 15;
if (age >= 18) {
cout << "Access granted - you are old enough.";
} else {
throw 505;
}
}
catch (...) {
cout << "Access denied - You must be at least 18 years
old.\n";
}
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