16

In Delphi, how can you use try, finally, and catch together? A Java/C# equivalent would look something like:

try {
    // Open DB connection, start transaction
} catch (Exception e) {
    // Roll back DB transaction
} finally {
    // Close DB connection, commit transaction
}

If you try this in Delphi, you can either use try/finally or try/except; but never all three together. I would like code like the following (which doesn't compile):

try
    // Open DB connection, start transaction
except on e: Exception do
begin
    // Roll back transaction
end
finally // Compiler error: expected "END" not "finally"
begin
    // Commit transaction
end
2
  • Because finally and except are semantically totally different, in Delphi they cannot be in the same statement. Just look at the RTL/VCL sources where finally and except are used (and their ratio). You will hardly see places where they are near. Nov 11, 2010 at 16:29
  • 4
    Don't put "commit transaction" in a finally block. If an exception occurs, you don't want to commit anything. You especially don't want to try to commit a transaction that you already rolled back in the preceding except block. Commit should be the final action in the try section. Nov 11, 2010 at 20:58

3 Answers 3

19

In Delphi you can use the following pattern:

// initialize / allocate resource (create objects etc.)
...
try
  try
    // use resource
    ...
  except
    // handle exception
    ...
  end;
finally
  // free resource / cleanup
  ...
end
11
  • 1
    Brilliant. I like how the nesting mimics the expected readability of try, catch, finally (as I'm used to from Java/C#).
    – ashes999
    Nov 11, 2010 at 15:29
  • 3
    Except it adds unnecessary level of indentation. I really wish they'd make it possible to write try..finally..except..end, even better if in random order (depending on what's processed first), and yet even better if it'd be possible to do "try..except A..finally..except B...end". It's really not that much in terms of coding, and does not burden the language, but adds a nice touch.
    – himself
    Nov 11, 2010 at 16:08
  • @himself: how often have you seen an except and finally really close to each other? Nov 11, 2010 at 16:30
  • 2
    Quite a few times. A typical case is when you need to destroy some temporary objects AND handle exceptions. But due to ugliness of this pattern, people usually just duplicate the destruction code in "try" and "except" clauses.
    – himself
    Nov 11, 2010 at 16:38
  • There's no use in finally in this case. Apr 29, 2012 at 6:01
10

write

try 
  // allocate resource here
  try 
  finally
    // free resource here
  end;
except
  // handle exception here
end;
5
  • 2
    Equally functional as mjustin's answer, but I like his more -- it makes it more readable that the exception is caught first and then the finally block comes at the end. Or maybe I'm just biased since that's the Java/C# style :)
    – ashes999
    Nov 11, 2010 at 15:28
  • 5
    mjustin's answer doesn't catch exceptions in the destructor. This is better approach.
    – gabr
    Nov 11, 2010 at 16:08
  • 3
    That hardly matters, @Gabr. If a destructor is throwing exceptions, you're already doomed. There is absolutely nothing your program can do to fix the problem that caused an error like that. Nov 11, 2010 at 18:01
  • Jim McKeeth has excellent video on Delayed Exception Handling (cc.embarcadero.com/item/26436) were he talks about problems in handling exceptions in the finally block. Nov 11, 2010 at 23:07
  • 1
    RobK: If the destructor is freeing a resource, and the heap raises an exception, you're correct. If some user-written-method invoked inside Destroy notification in some object causes a non-fatal error that you want to catch, then that's where you're wrong.
    – Warren P
    Sep 20, 2011 at 20:36
4

While nesting the try...except inside a try...finally (or vice versa) directly answers the question I would like to point out that original question, regardless of what language you are using, is mixing the concerns of error handling and resource management. Try...except and try...finally are ugly. They distract you from what your code is doing. A better approach is to extract error handling into a separate method:

procedure Read(Connection: TDBConnection);
begin
  try
    //Read DB
  except
    //Handle Exception
  end;
end;

procedure ReadRecord;
begin
  DBConnection.Open;
  Read(DBConnection);
  DBConnection.Close;
end;

Now your error handling is self-contained and can be ignored so you can concentrate your attention on the happy path.

Wait! What about the open and close? What if they raise exceptions?

Simple. Wrap those operations in try...except functions and handle them as well. It shouldn't be necessary. If the DB library your using is worth anything an exception in an open or close won't leave the connection in an unknown state. Then again, exceptions are there for the things you don't expect.

The same technique can be used with any resource: object creation, file access, etc. When the body of your function is guaranteed not to raise an exception try...finally is unnecessary.

There is, of course, function call overhead but in most cases it is negligible and your error handling functions should be small enough to let the compiler inline them.

1
  • +1 for going beyond the obvious question. Unfortunately, my question is pure syntactical, not semantical.
    – ashes999
    Nov 18, 2010 at 16:43

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