The .NET Framework has a lot of pre-defined exceptions. For example, if an invalid parameter was passed to my method, I'm supposed to raise an ArgumentException
(or ArgumentNullException
, if the paramter was null
). If a method is called that is invalid for the current object state, I'm supposed to raise an InvalidOperationException
.
Is there some pre-defined exception for the "this code should never be reached" case? Here's an example:
void myMethod() {
int a;
... /* Some complex code that manipulates a. In the end, "a" can only be 1 or 2. */
switch (a) {
case 1: ...
case 2: ...
default: // just an extra sanity check
// Oops, we should never be here.
// There's apparently some bug in the code above.
throw new ThereIsABugInTheCodeException();
}
}
I don't think creating my own exception for such a rare case is justified. On the other hand, just throwing Exception
is discouraged as well. I guess some kind of AssertionFailedException
would be appropriate, but I did not find any in the .net Framework. (Note that Trace.Assert does not throw an exception, so that's not an option either.)
EDIT: To clarify: a
is NOT an argument. Let me rephrase the question to make it clearer: In the middle of a method I do a sanity check (just to make sure, it should not be necessary if the code in the beginning of the method is correct). I find out the sanity check fails and would like to throw an exception. Which one do I throw? I don't think that ArgumentException
is the correct answer, since ArgumentException
should only be thrown if the caller of the method did something wrong. That is not the case here. The method itself realizes at runtime that it contains a bug.