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java.lang.Object
java.lang.Throwable
There are two special cases: Error
and RuntimeException
:
these two classes (and their subclasses) are considered unchecked
exceptions, and are either frequent enough or catastrophic enough that you
do not need to declare them in throws
clauses. Everything
else is a checked exception, and is ususally a subclass of
Exception
; these exceptions have to be handled or declared.
Instances of this class are usually created with knowledge of the execution context, so that you can get a stack trace of the problem spot in the code. Also, since JDK 1.4, Throwables participate in "exception chaining." This means that one exception can be caused by another, and preserve the information of the original.
One reason this is useful is to wrap exceptions to conform to an interface. For example, it would be bad design to require all levels of a program interface to be aware of the low-level exceptions thrown at one level of abstraction. Another example is wrapping a checked exception in an unchecked one, to communicate that failure occured while still obeying the method throws clause of a superclass.
A cause is assigned in one of two ways; but can only be assigned once
in the lifetime of the Throwable. There are new constructors added to
several classes in the exception hierarchy that directly initialize the
cause, or you can use the initCause
method. This second
method is especially useful if the superclass has not been retrofitted
with new constructors:
try { lowLevelOp(); } catch (LowLevelException lle) { throw (HighLevelException) new HighLevelException().initCause(lle); }Notice the cast in the above example; without it, your method would need a throws clase that declared Throwable, defeating the purpose of chainig your exceptions.
By convention, exception classes have two constructors: one with no arguments, and one that takes a String for a detail message. Further, classes which are likely to be used in an exception chain also provide a constructor that takes a Throwable, with or without a detail message string.
Another 1.4 feature is the StackTrace, a means of reflection that allows the program to inspect the context of the exception, and which is serialized, so that remote procedure calls can correctly pass exceptions.
Constructor Summary | |
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Method Summary | |
Throwable |
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Throwable |
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String |
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String |
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StackTraceElement[] |
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Throwable | |
void |
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void |
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void |
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void |
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String |
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Methods inherited from class java.lang.Object | |
clone , equals , extends Object> getClass , finalize , hashCode , notify , notifyAll , toString , wait , wait , wait |
public Throwable()
Instantiate this Throwable with an empty message. The cause remains uninitialized.fillInStackTrace()
will be called to set up the stack trace.
public Throwable(String message)
Instantiate this Throwable with the given message. The cause remains uninitialized.fillInStackTrace()
will be called to set up the stack trace.
- Parameters:
message
- the message to associate with the Throwable
public Throwable(String message, Throwable cause)
Instantiate this Throwable with the given message and cause. Note that the message is unrelated to the message of the cause.fillInStackTrace()
will be called to set up the stack trace.
- Parameters:
message
- the message to associate with the Throwablecause
- the cause, may be null
- Since:
- 1.4
public Throwable(Throwable cause)
Instantiate this Throwable with the given cause. The message is then built ascause == null ? null : cause.toString()
.fillInStackTrace()
will be called to set up the stack trace.
- Parameters:
cause
- the cause, may be null
- Since:
- 1.4
public Throwable fillInStackTrace()
Fill in the stack trace with the current execution stack.
- Returns:
- this same throwable
- See Also:
printStackTrace()
public Throwable getCause()
Returns the cause of this exception, or null if the cause is not known or non-existant. This cause is initialized by the new constructors, or by calling initCause.
- Returns:
- the cause of this Throwable
- Since:
- 1.4
public String getLocalizedMessage()
Get a localized version of this Throwable's error message. This method must be overridden in a subclass of Throwable to actually produce locale-specific methods. The Throwable implementation just returns getMessage().
- Returns:
- a localized version of this error message
- Since:
- 1.1
- See Also:
getMessage()
public String getMessage()
Get the message associated with this Throwable.
- Returns:
- the error message associated with this Throwable, may be null
public StackTraceElement[] getStackTrace()
Provides access to the information printed inprintStackTrace()
. The array is non-null, with no null entries, although the virtual machine is allowed to skip stack frames. If the array is not 0-length, then slot 0 holds the information on the stack frame where the Throwable was created (or at least wherefillInStackTrace()
was called).
- Returns:
- an array of stack trace information, as available from the VM
- Since:
- 1.4
public Throwable initCause(Throwable cause)
Initialize the cause of this Throwable. This may only be called once during the object lifetime, including implicitly by chaining constructors.
- Parameters:
cause
- the cause of this Throwable, may be null
- Returns:
- this
- Throws:
IllegalArgumentException
- if cause is this (a Throwable can't be its own cause!)IllegalStateException
- if the cause has already been set
- Since:
- 1.4
public void printStackTrace()
Print a stack trace to the standard error stream. This stream is the current contents ofSystem.err
. The first line of output is the result oftoString()
, and the remaining lines represent the data created byfillInStackTrace()
. While the format is unspecified, this implementation uses the suggested format, demonstrated by this example:
public class Junk { public static void main(String args[]) { try { a(); } catch(HighLevelException e) { e.printStackTrace(); } } static void a() throws HighLevelException { try { b(); } catch(MidLevelException e) { throw new HighLevelException(e); } } static void b() throws MidLevelException { c(); } static void c() throws MidLevelException { try { d(); } catch(LowLevelException e) { throw new MidLevelException(e); } } static void d() throws LowLevelException { e(); } static void e() throws LowLevelException { throw new LowLevelException(); } } class HighLevelException extends Exception { HighLevelException(Throwable cause) { super(cause); } } class MidLevelException extends Exception { MidLevelException(Throwable cause) { super(cause); } } class LowLevelException extends Exception { }
HighLevelException: MidLevelException: LowLevelException at Junk.a(Junk.java:13) at Junk.main(Junk.java:4) Caused by: MidLevelException: LowLevelException at Junk.c(Junk.java:23) at Junk.b(Junk.java:17) at Junk.a(Junk.java:11) ... 1 more Caused by: LowLevelException at Junk.e(Junk.java:30) at Junk.d(Junk.java:27) at Junk.c(Junk.java:21) ... 3 more
public void printStackTrace(PrintStream s)
Print a stack trace to the specified PrintStream. SeeprintStackTrace()
for the sample format.
- Parameters:
s
- the PrintStream to write the trace to
public void printStackTrace(PrintWriter pw)
Prints the exception, the detailed message and the stack trace associated with this Throwable to the givenPrintWriter
. The actual output written is implemention specific. Use the result ofgetStackTrace()
when more precise information is needed.This implementation first prints a line with the result of this object's
toString()
method.
Then for all elements given bygetStackTrace
it prints a line containing three spaces, the string "at " and the result of calling thetoString()
method on theStackTraceElement
object. IfgetStackTrace()
returns an empty array it prints a line containing three spaces and the string "<<No stacktrace available>>".
Then ifgetCause()
doesn't return null it adds a line starting with "Caused by: " and the result of callingtoString()
on the cause.
Then for every cause (of a cause, etc) the stacktrace is printed the same as for the top levelThrowable
except that as soon as all the remaining stack frames of the cause are the same as the the last stack frames of the throwable that the cause is wrapped in then a line starting with three spaces and the string "... X more" is printed, where X is the number of remaining stackframes.
- Parameters:
pw
- the PrintWriter to write the trace to
- Since:
- 1.1
public void setStackTrace(StackTraceElement[] stackTrace)
Change the stack trace manually. This method is designed for remote procedure calls, which intend to alter the stack trace before or after serialization according to the context of the remote call.The contents of the given stacktrace is copied so changes to the original array do not change the stack trace elements of this throwable.
- Parameters:
stackTrace
- the new trace to use
- Throws:
NullPointerException
- if stackTrace is null or has null elements
- Since:
- 1.4
public String toString()
Get a human-readable representation of this Throwable. The detail message is retrieved by getLocalizedMessage(). Then, with a null detail message, this string is simply the object's class name; otherwise the string isgetClass().getName() + ": " + message
.
- Returns:
- a human-readable String represting this Throwable