If there is a throw
statement in the middle of a function, does the function terminate at this point?
7 Answers
Yes, with the exception of any finally
blocks, or if there is an exception handler within the function that can catch the type of exception you're throwing.
Control passes to the next exception handler (catch
block) in the call stack, whether that be in the current method or one of its parents. If the throw
is not encapsulated in a try/catch block, any finally
blocks are executed before a parent catch block is sought.
Did you try it? :)
I guess the right answer is, it depends. If you wrapped the throw with a try/catch for whatever strange reason, then no. If you didn't, then yes, unless you didn't catch the exception somewhere up the call stack, in which case your entire application would crash.
Yes, unless you catch it or have a finally block:
try {
var foo = 42 /0;
}
finally
{
// This will execute after the exception has been thrown
}
-
... and in the case of the finally, the current method will be exited anyways, i.e., code after would not execute. Mar 3, 2011 at 1:09
It does, yes. It generates an exception that goes up the calling stack.
-
is there any equivalent to Java's finally bloc that could modulate this answer ?– PypeBrosMar 2, 2011 at 7:20
-
There is, yes. You do get the typical try, catch, finally exception handling higher up the stack. Mar 2, 2011 at 7:21
An exception is an event that happened when it wasn't supposed to and so the application does not know what to do with such event. In all OOP languages (that I know of) what the runtime does is to halt the function that called the event and then throw the Exception up the stack until someone knows what to do with it. That is where try / catch blocks come in.