According to the C++ FAQ, when one throws an object, it's thrown using the static type of the expression. Hence, if you have:
catch ( some_exception const &e ) {
// ...
throw e; // throws static type, possibly causing "slicing"; should just "throw;" instead
}
and e is actually a reference to some class derived from some_exception, the above throw will cause the object to be "sliced" silently. Yes, I know the correct answer is simply to throw;, but the way things are seems like an unnecessary source of confusion and bugs.
What's the rationale for this? Why wouldn't you want it to throw by the dynamic type of the object?