I'm converting some C# code to Java and I need to include an exception that is similar to C#'s InvalidOperationException. Does such a thing exist? Also is there a list of equivalent exception types in the two languages? Thanks.


I think in my particular case IllegalStateException is most appropriate. Thanks for all the responses.

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In Java it would be an Error rather than an Exception... That's the JVM's way of telling us that something went terribly wrong. – Andreas_D Jul 2 '10 at 12:43
@Andreas_D - What do you mean:) I can't connect your post to the question. – Petar Minchev Jul 2 '10 at 12:48
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@Petar - In Java we have two kinds of Throwables: Errors and Exceptions. Errors are usually thrown by the virtual machine. My understanding of the IOE is that the VM detects that a method cannot be executed. I guess, in Java you would have to modify loaded bytecode at runtime to have this effect while in C# a crashed or unloaded dll could lead to this exception - and in this case, the JVM would complain - with an Error. – Andreas_D Jul 2 '10 at 12:54
@Andreas - The IOE is a perfectly valid exception to be thrown by the programmer. In fact I think it is commonly used. – Petar Minchev Jul 2 '10 at 12:56
@Andreas_D: Very, very good point about also looking at Error subclasses, although in this specific case, I think it would be classed an Exception instead (probably a RuntimeException). – T.J. Crowder Jul 2 '10 at 12:58
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2 Answers

up vote 10 down vote accepted

Probably IllegalStateException.

From what I read about InvalidOperationException: "The exception that is thrown when a method call is invalid for the object's current state."

For IllegalStateException: "Signals that a method has been invoked at an illegal or inappropriate time. In other words, the Java environment or Java application is not in an appropriate state for the requested operation."

Depending on how you are using InvalidOperationException, I could also see IllegalArgumentException and UnsupportedOperationException being what you want. The former implies that, in general, the method is fine to call, it was just passed garbage this time; the latter implies that the method is never appropriate to call for this instance (unlike IllegalStateException, which implies that it might be appropriate to call the subject method sometimes, just not at the moment).


I am not aware of a general c# <=> Java translation of exceptions.

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+1 That's pretty much a direct match. (The .Net exception's name isn't very good, is it?) – T.J. Crowder Jul 2 '10 at 12:53
@T.J.: I kind of like the .Net name, especially if it were paired with the UnsupportedOperationException naming. I think those two names could be used to communicate the sometimes vs always distinction between the two. The .Net equivalent of an UnsupportedOperationException (I point it out in my comment on your answer) is okay name-wise (NotSupportedException), but both languages made crappy pairings of the two types, IMO. – Carl Jul 2 '10 at 13:01
+1 An illegal state causes an invalid operation. Quite logical:) – Petar Minchev Jul 2 '10 at 13:02
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Petar pointed me to this example code (from msdn)

void WriteLog()
{
    if (!this.logFile.CanWrite)
    {
        throw new System.InvalidOperationException("Logfile cannot be read-only");
    }
    // Else write data to the log and return.
}

So in this context you could use an IllegalStateException, although it says:

Thrown when an action is attempted at a time when the virtual machine is not in the correct state.

And an illegal VM state is definitly not the issue in the above reference example. Here, the problem is that the object is invalid, because it references a read-only logfile.

My own advice: just define a custom exception like

package com.pany.project;
public class InvalidOperationException extends RuntimeException {

   // add constructors with call to super as needed

}

To me, that's much easier then trying to find the best fitting Exception from the java.lang package.

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