Exception Objects
So far, you've been using the exception as a sentinel—that is, the presence of the exception signals the error—but you haven't touched or examined the Exception
object itself. The System.Exception
object provides a number of useful methods and properties. The Message
property provides information about the exception, such as why it was thrown. The Message
property is read-only; the code throwing the exception can set the Message
property as an argument to the exception constructor.
The HelpLink
property provides a link to the help file associated with the exception. This property is read/write.
Tip
VB 6 programmers take note: in C#, you need to be careful when declaring and instantiating object variables on the same line of code. If there is a possibility that an error could be thrown in the constructor method, you might be tempted to put the variable declaration and instantiation inside the try
block. But, if you do that, the variable will only be scoped within the try
block, and it can't be referenced within the catch
or finally
blocks. The best approach is to declare the object variable before the try
block and instantiate it within the try
block.
The StackTrace
property is read-only and is set by the runtime. In Example 11-6, the Exception.HelpLink
property is set and retrieved to provide information to the user about the DivideByZeroException
. The StackTrace
property of the exception can provide a stack trace for the error statement. A stack trace displays the ...
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