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So I have been doing a bit of looking but couldn't really find anything that answered my question. In my main method, I have a loop of strings that are going to be run into a method where after it will query 10-12 different tables based of off this string. I currently have the queries surrounded in try catch blocks to catch exceptions. What I want to happen is if there is a timeout or some other sql exception for the program to write to a log (which I have done already) and then return to the main method from any of the other methods it may be in, and go on to the next string in the loop. I don't know a lot about throwing exceptions that are caught farther up, so I though maybe that's what I need to do, but I couldn't find anywhere if I throw an exception if it runs up to where it is caught or what happens exactly with it. Do I just need to throw the exception in the query methods and surround the method call in the main method with a try catch block? Any help is greatly appreciated. Thanks

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    I think you pretty much understand it ... if method A calls B which calls C which calls D which calls E etc. and E throws an exception, then if E doesn't catch it, it looks to see if the call in D is in a place where the exception will get caught. If not, then it looks in C, then B, then A. So if you have a try..catch block in main, it will catch your exception if it isn't caught somewhere further up the stack.
    – ajb
    Dec 4, 2014 at 22:39
  • Thank you very much, I thought it was like that, but I wasn't really positive about it since I usually handle exceptions as they happen instead of throwing them to be caught higher up.
    – Tapialj
    Dec 4, 2014 at 23:31
  • It's probably correct to handle some exceptions as they happen. Generally, I think the distinction is between "expected" exceptions that should be handled in a specific way; and exceptions that indicate that something has gone wrong enough that you have to abandon the whole operation, which is what I think you're looking for. If you want the "best" way to deal with exceptions, you'll find a lot of disagreement among experts.
    – ajb
    Dec 5, 2014 at 17:27

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