As far as I understand, using works like a try/catch/finally, so I would expect that if an exception occurs in a using statement it would get caught (which is kinda odd, because that would also mean that the exception is silently eaten). The using statement should catch the exception and call the Dispose
method, however, that is not happening. I've devised a simple test to demonstrate the issue.
Here is where I force an exception to occur inside the using statement:
using (TcpClient client = new TcpClient())
{
// Why does this throw when the using statement is supposed to be a try/catch/finally?
client.Connect(null);
}
An exception is throw by client.Connect()
(meaning that it was not caught by the using statement or that it was re-thrown):
System.ArgumentNullException: Value cannot be null.
Parameter name: remoteEP
at System.Net.Sockets.TcpClient.Connect(IPEndPoint remoteEP)
at DotNETSandbox.Program.Main(String[] args) in C:\path\to\Sandbox\Program.cs:line 42
According to a Microsoft article on the topic, the using statement might throw if the Dispose
method throws.
However, when I'm following the using pattern, it is evident that the Dispose method does not throw:
TcpClient c2 = new TcpClient();
try
{
c2.Connect(null);
}
catch (Exception e)
{
// We caught the null ref exception
try
{
// Try to dispose: works fine, does not throw!
((IDisposable)c2).Dispose();
}
catch (Exception e2)
{
Console.WriteLine(e2.ToString());
}
Console.WriteLine(e.ToString());
}
I'm a little confused, since I was expecting using
to behave like a try/catch. Could anybody explain why this is happening?
using
statement to silently eat exceptions?using
has a catch statement and I never really invested too much thought about it until now. I always caught the exceptions and it never really worried me, but after reading the article I realized that I'm missing something.