show/hide this revision's text 2 test !_ in WMD control

In my experience the biggest overhead is in actually throwing an exception and handling it. I once worked on a project where code similar to the following was used to check if someone had a right to edit some object. This HasRight() method was used everywhere in the presentation layer, and was often called for 100s of objects.

bool HasRight(string rightName, DomainObject obj) {
  try {
    CheckRight(rightName, obj);
    return true;
  }
  catch (Exception ex) {
    return false;
  }
}

void CheckRight(string rightName, DomainObject obj) {
  if (! _user.Rights.Contains(rightName))
    !_user.Rights.Contains(rightName))
    throw new Exception();
}

When the test database got fuller with test data, this lead to a very visible slowdown while openening new forms etc.

So I refactored it to the following, which - according to later quick 'n dirty measurements - is about 2 orders of magnitude faster:

bool HasRight(string rightName, DomainObject obj) {
  return _user.Rights.Contains(rightName);
}

void CheckRight(string rightName, DomainObject obj) {
  if (!HasRight(rightName, obj))
    throw new Exception();
}

So in short, using exceptions in normal process flow is about two orders of magnitude slower then using similar process flow without exceptions.

show/hide this revision's text 1

In my experience the biggest overhead is in actually throwing an exception and handling it. I once worked on a project where code similar to the following was used to check if someone had a right to edit some object. This HasRight() method was used everywhere in the presentation layer, and was often called for 100s of objects.

bool HasRight(string rightName, DomainObject obj) {
  try {
    CheckRight(rightName, obj);
    return true;
  }
  catch (Exception ex) {
    return false;
  }
}

void CheckRight(string rightName, DomainObject obj) {
  if (! _user.Rights.Contains(rightName))
    throw new Exception();
}

When the test database got fuller with test data, this lead to a very visible slowdown while openening new forms etc.

So I refactored it to the following, which - according to later quick 'n dirty measurements - is about 2 orders of magnitude faster:

bool HasRight(string rightName, DomainObject obj) {
  return _user.Rights.Contains(rightName);
}

void CheckRight(string rightName, DomainObject obj) {
  if (!HasRight(rightName, obj))
    throw new Exception();
}

So in short, using exceptions in normal process flow is about two orders of magnitude slower then using similar process flow without exceptions.