I suppose that dynamic exception checking is just another name of firing exceptions at run-time.
Although I believe in static exception checking, Java way of static exception checking really has problems that concern interface implementations.
Say, we have IParser
. What appropriate exceptions its method parse()
may throw? Possibly SyntaxErrorException
. Now we want a ServerResponseParserFromURL
to be used in such a way:
class ServerResponseParserFromURL implements IParser { .... };
....
try {
IParser parser = new ServerResponseParser(new URL("http://example.com/test.htm"));
parser.parse();
....
}
Here is the problem — the implementation of IParser
may fire, say, NoRouteToHostException
. So we can not use nice and concise form and need to fallback to long form:
class ServerResponseParser implements IParser { .... };
....
try {
String response = getServerResponse(new URL("http://example.com/test.htm"));
IParser parser = new ServerResponseParser(response);
parser.parse();
....
}
As you see, in practice, our IParser
is IStringParser
, not the generic IParser
.
Although it may be tolerable in this particular case, it complicates things when we want to supply an IParser
as one of arguments of a function f
. Say, to be able to parse response of url-identified server, we can not just feed ServerResponseParser
object and url — we need to find a way to feed getServerResponse
method to f
.