Use this piece of code for example. You should always use the most specific exception first and then use the most general exception at the end. Or I believe I can say as you put it - The most derived exception first.
In this case, the first catch block already catches all exceptions of this or of a super type ('System.Exception')". This is the reason for the order for exception.
try
{
throw new formatException();
}
catch(Exception ex)
{
<...>
}
catch(formatException ex)
{
<...>
}
Edit -
If you look at the inheritance hierarchy of FormatException class -
System.Exception
System.SystemException
System.FormatException
and the inheritance hierarchy of OutOfMemoryException class is -
System.Exception
System.SystemException
System.OutOfMemoryException
The order of precedence of exceptions comes into the picture only when you have catch blocks with exception classes that are either base or derived classes of each other.
For e.g. if you have two catch blocks - FormatException and Exception then you will need to worry about the order of the catch blocks because FormatException class inherits from Exception class.
If Exception catch block is placed before the FormatException catch block then every exception is caught by the Exception catch block (even a format exception).
If you have the FormatException catch block before the Exception catch block then a format exception is caught by the specific FormatException catch block but all other exceptions are caught by the Exception catch block.
But, if you have two catch blocks such as FormatException and OutOfMemoryException. Then you don't need to worry about the order as these two classes aren't the base or derived from each other. So, they are just specific exceptions.
So, you can have either -
try
{
throw new formatException();
}
catch(OutOfMemoryException ex)
{
<...>
}
catch(FormatException ex)
{
<...>
}
Or
try
{
throw new formatException();
}
catch(FormatException ex)
{
<...>
}
catch(OutOfMemoryException ex)
{
<...>
}
It wouldn't make a difference because, no matter what the order is the formatexception is always caught by the specific FormatException catch block. Its the same for OutOfMemoryException. I hope this answers your question.
Exception