2

In following code, both Scanner and PrintWriter constructor throws FileNotFound-exception.

(PrintWriter throws if e.g. the file is readonly).

I want to make different adjustments depending on whether of the two threw the exception.

How do I accomplish this in a hopefully simple way? Can't find a fitting method in the FileNotFoundException-class.

try {
    lineReader = new Scanner( scanFile );
    PrintWriter pw = new PrintWriter("ord.txt");

    try { ... }

    finally { 
        lineReader.close(); 
        pw.close();
    }

} 
catch (FileNotFoundException e) {

}
2
  • you could put the printwriter line in another try block inside the first Jan 11, 2014 at 18:13
  • You'll have to create two blocks or if you want to add some logic to your exception you can inspect the stacktrace with e.getStackTrace and get the last call in the stacktrace. This should return either the scanner call or the printwriter call. Jan 11, 2014 at 18:14

5 Answers 5

1

You could do something like this without changing what you have too much (i.e. no more nested trys):

boolean success = false;  // <--

try {
    lineReader = new Scanner( scanFile );
    success = true;  // <--
    PrintWriter pw = new PrintWriter("ord.txt");

    ...

} catch (FileNotFoundException e) {
    /*
     * If 'success' is false, then Scanner threw the
     * exception, otherwise it was PrintWriter.
     */
}
0

Here is a way to do it using another try block

try {
    lineReader = new Scanner( scanFile );

    try{
        PrintWriter pw = new PrintWriter("ord.txt");

        try { ... }

        finally { 
            lineReader.close(); 
        pw.close();
        }
    }
    catch (FileNotFoundException e) {
    //thrown by printwriter
    }

} 
catch (FileNotFoundException e) {
//thrown by scanner
}
0

Try this............

try
{    
    try {
     lineReader = new Scanner( scanFile );
    :
    }catch (FileNotFoundException e) {

    }

    try {
     PrintWriter pw = new PrintWriter("ord.txt");
     :
    }catch (FileNotFoundException e) {

    }
}
    finally { 
        lineReader.close(); 
        pw.close();
    }
0
0

Based on @arshajii 's code:

try {
    lineReader = new Scanner( scanFile );
    PrintWriter pw = new PrintWriter("ord.txt");

    ...

} catch (FileNotFoundException e) {
    if(lineReader==null){
       // Reader is at fault
    }else{
       //PrintWriter is at fault
    } 
}
-1

Aside from the obvious double try-catch, you can inspect the stacktrace.

Consider the following example:

public class Main {
    public static void main(String[] args) {
        try {
            maybeThrowAnException1();
            maybeThrowAnException2();
        } catch (FileNotFoundException e) {
            System.out.println(e.getStackTrace()[0].getMethodName());
        }

    }

    private static void maybeThrowAnException1() throws FileNotFoundException{
        if(new Random().nextInt(2) % 2 == 0){
            throw new FileNotFoundException();
        }
    }

    private static void maybeThrowAnException2() throws FileNotFoundException{
        if(new Random().nextInt(2) % 2 == 0){
            throw new FileNotFoundException();
        }
    }
}

This will sometimes print MaybeThrowAnException1, sometimes MaybeThrowAnException2. You can change this to e.getStackTrace()[0].getClassName() to see if it returns Scanner or PrintWriter and perform logic based on that result.

2
  • Cheers! Ill go with e.getStackTrace()[0].getClassName() Jan 11, 2014 at 18:26
  • This is an extremely hacky approach, and it encourages bad practice. It would be much better to use some kind of boolean flag or use nested trys.
    – arshajii
    Jan 11, 2014 at 18:29

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