Does a try-catch
block catch segmentation fault errors?
I am reading a text file using the function given below but sometimes the file is empty and the program crashes. I would like the program to continue running and provide another file when this file is empty or in use.
Path2D read_gesture(const char* filename)
{
Path2D path;
//MultiStrokeGesture MultiStrokes;
vector<string> text_file;
int no_of_paths=0;
std::ifstream ifs(filename);
for (std::string line; std::getline(ifs, line); )
{
no_of_paths=no_of_paths+1;
double a, b;
stringstream ss(line);
if (!(ss >> a >> b)) {cout<<"wrong format"<<endl;}
std::cout << "You said, " << a << ", " << b << ".\n";
path.push_back(Point2D(a,b));
}
cout<<"saving gesture"<<endl;
return path;
}
I tried something like:
Path2D path;
try
{
path=read_gesture("test.txt");
}
catch(int e)
{
path=read_gesture("test2.txt");
}
but the program still crashes. What might the problem be?
- A little correction, the file called in
catch
was not same as that oftry
, that was a typo.
catch(int e)
does not catch c++ exceptions likestd::exception
, it catches an integerread_gesture
may generate an exception and is in the catch block, you should have another try-catch block there as well, and so on recursively... try doing something different (that doesn't generates exceptions!)try
andcatch
blocks. If you did catch an exception, that tells you that something went Badly wrong so the very last thing you should do is do the same thing again. Exception handling is about retaining control and either correcting the issue or exiting gracefully. That's the definition of insanity: doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.