If your problem comes from your own bad code, it's better to use ASSERTs to guard against it. Exception handling is needed to identify problems that program cannot handle and tell them about the user, because user can handle them. But bugs in your program are not something the user can handle, so program crashing will tell not much
I disagree with this aspect of the accepted answer. An assert is not hands-down better than throwing an exception. If exceptions were suitable only for run-time errors (or "external problems") , what is std::logic_error
for?
A logic error is almost by definition the kind of condition that prevents a program from continuing. If the program is a logical construct, and a condition occurs outside the domain of that logic, how can it continue? Gather ye inputs while ye may, and throw an exception!
It's not like there's not prior art. std::vector
, to name but one, throws a logic error exception, namely std::out_of_range
. If you use the standard library and don't have a top-level handler to catch standard exceptions -- if only to call what() and exit(3) -- then your programs are subject to abrupt silent, termination.
An assert macro is a much weaker guard. There is no recovery. Unless, that is, you're not running a debug build, in which case there's no execution. The assert macro belongs to an era when computation was 6 orders of magnitude slower than today. If you're going to the trouble to test for logic errors, but not to use that test when it counts, in production, you'd better have a lot of confidence in your code!
The standard library provides for logic error exceptions, and employs them. They are there for a reason: because logic errors occur, and are exceptional. Just because C features assertions is no reason to rely on such a primitive (and, arguably, useless) mechanism, when an exception handles the job so much better.