I'm working on cleaning up some of my code and I came to a point where I wasn't sure which route would be better.
Currently I have a single try catch block over the majority of my method and it handles a few separate exceptions at the end, but I figured having more try catch blocks would be better just for maintenance. However, while breaking down the code I came to a point where I was writing multiple blocks for the same type of exception. I can see the up side to writing a block for each part since I can then give more specifics to why it failed.
My question is this... is there a downside to doing this? Could there be performance issues or some other hidden monster that I'm not seeing?
Also, what is the preferred way of handling multiple exceptions in a method, is there an industry standard?
Just to better illustrate my point here's some pseudo code
//multiple try catch for same exception
try {
//some code here
} catch (MyException e) {
//specific error message here
}
try {
//some different code here
} catch (MyException e) {
//more specific error message indicating a different issue
}