555

I am using java language,I have a method that is supposed to return an object if it is found.

If it is not found, should I:

  1. return null
  2. throw an exception
  3. other

Which is the best practise or idiom?

4
  • 65
    Whatever you do, make sure you document it. I think this point is more important than exactly which approach is "best".
    – Rik
    Oct 6, 2008 at 23:04
  • 7
    This depends on the prevailing idioms of the programming language. Please tag this question with a programming language tag.
    – Teddy
    Oct 1, 2009 at 22:41
  • 3
    Returning null may only mean success or failure which very often isn't much of information (some methods may fail in many ways). Libraries should better throw exceptions to make errors explicit and this way the main program can decide how to handle the error on a higher level (in contrast to builtin error handling logic).
    – 3k-
    Aug 20, 2013 at 11:33
  • 5
    Seems to me that the real question being asked is if we should consider it exceptional for an entity to be not found, and if so, why? No one really answered sufficiently how to come to that conclusion, and now the Q&A is closed. A real shame that the industry hasn't come to consensus on this important topic. Yes, I know it depends. So, explain why it depends with more than "if exceptional, throw"
    – crush
    Aug 9, 2018 at 16:19

36 Answers 36

530

If you are always expecting to find a value then throw the exception if it is missing. The exception would mean that there was a problem.

If the value can be missing or present and both are valid for the application logic then return a null.

More important: What do you do other places in the code? Consistency is important.

9
  • 31
    @Ken: +1, it would be nice to mention that if you do throw an exception, but can detect it a priori (like HasItem(...)), then the user should provide said Has* or Contains method.
    – user7116
    Oct 6, 2008 at 22:29
  • 4
    Instead of returning a value or null when the value is missing, consider returning a Maybe<T>. See mikehadlow.blogspot.nl/2011/01/monads-in-c-5-maybe.html. Sep 29, 2015 at 10:07
  • 2
    In a @ErwinRooijakkers design choice way, as of Java 8 you could also return an Optional<T> Jan 27, 2016 at 15:27
  • 5
    I find it a bit disturbing every answer echoes the same proverb: "If it's exceptional, throw." Most engineers are going to be familiar with this principle. In my opinion, the real question here is how to determine if it should be considered exceptional. The OP is looking for the best practice in regards to something like a repository pattern for example. Is it typically considered exceptional for an object not to exist given a primary key? Yes, that is something his domain will determine, but what do most experts with years of experience suggest? That's the type of answer we should see.
    – crush
    Aug 9, 2018 at 16:05
  • 6
    @crush I think a guiding principal is what parameters are passed to the function. If you pass an identity, like you mention a primary key, then it should be considered exceptional if that item is not found, because it indicates an inconsistent state in the system. Example: GetPersonById(25) would throw if that person has been deleted, but GetPeopleByHairColor("red") would return an empty result. So, I think the parameters say something about the expectations.
    – John Knoop
    Nov 1, 2018 at 14:40
112

Only throw an exception if it is truly an error. If it is expected behavior for the object to not exist, return the null.

Otherwise it is a matter of preference.

5
  • 4
    I don't agree. You can throw exceptions as status codes: "NotFoundException"
    – ACV
    Oct 16, 2017 at 13:37
  • It certainly shouldn't be a matter of preference. That's how we end up with inconsistent code - if not among your team's code, then almost certainly when intertwining other developers code with your own (external libraries).
    – crush
    Aug 9, 2018 at 16:21
  • 8
    I think handling the null case is much easier than "NotFoundException". Think about how many lines of try-catch you have to write around every single retrival request that throws a "NotFoundException"... It's painful to ready all that code in my eyes.
    – visc
    Aug 9, 2018 at 20:05
  • 2
    i would like to quote Tony Hoare: "I call it my billion-dollar mistake". I would not return null, i either throw an exception and handle it correctly, or return an empty object.
    – seven
    Sep 9, 2019 at 13:12
  • @visc Don't catch exceptions you can't resolve! If it's an erroneous situation, propagate it out to the top level & fail the request/ UI action. Best practice is to throw often, catch rarely. literatejava.com/exceptions/…
    – Thomas W
    Jun 10, 2022 at 5:36
85

As a general rule, if the method should always return an object, then go with the exception. If you anticipate the occasional null and want to handle it in a certain way, go with the null.

Whatever you do, I highly advise against the third option: Returning a string that says "WTF".

4
  • Plus one because in the good old days i did that more than a couple of times as a quick dirty "temporal" fix... no good idea. Specially if its going to be reviewed if you are a student. Mar 13, 2014 at 15:48
  • 24
    I was going to down vote since the WTF options seemed awesome to me...but apparently I have a heart
    – swestner
    Sep 23, 2015 at 20:45
  • 23
    throw new WtfExcepti😲n Jan 16, 2018 at 0:41
  • I think it would be helpful if this answer talked about reasons why a method would always return an object versus "an occasional null". What warrants that type of situation? Give an example of when such a circumstance might exist.
    – crush
    Aug 9, 2018 at 16:23
52

If null never indicates an error then just return null.

If null is always an error then throw an exception.

If null is sometimes an exception then code two routines. One routine throws an exception and the other is a boolean test routine that returns the object in an output parameter and the routine returns a false if the object was not found.

It's hard to misuse a Try routine. It's real easy to forget to check for null.

So when null is an error you just write

object o = FindObject();

When the null isn't an error you can code something like

if (TryFindObject(out object o)
  // Do something with o
else
  // o was not found
5
  • 1
    This would be a more useful suggestion if C# provided real tuples, so we could avoid using an [out] parameter. Still, this is the preferred pattern, so +1. Oct 6, 2008 at 19:07
  • 3
    In my opinion, the try approach is the best one. You don't have to look up then what happens if the object cannot be returned. With a Try method, you immediately know what to do. Oct 6, 2008 at 20:52
  • reminds me the find and findOrFail from Laravel Eloquent May 31, 2018 at 12:00
  • @ErikForbes I know your comment is old, but wouldn't the answer have been to define a multi-property object that would be returned from the TryFindObject method? Tuples seem more of a lazy paradigm for programmers who don't want to take the time to define an object that encapsulates multiple values. That is essentially all tuples are at the core anyways.
    – crush
    Aug 9, 2018 at 16:26
  • @crush - Named Tuple Literals are an option, IMO. This is a link to an async Try Get pattern with tuples. stackoverflow.com/questions/1626597/…
    – ttugates
    Apr 9, 2019 at 0:10
27

I just wanted to recapitulate the options mentioned before, throwing some new ones in:

  1. return null
  2. throw an Exception
  3. use the null object pattern
  4. provide a boolean parameter to you method, so the caller can chose if he wants you to throw an exception
  5. provide an extra parameter, so the caller can set a value which he gets back if no value is found

Or you might combine these options:

Provide several overloaded versions of your getter, so the caller can decide which way to go. In most cases, only the first one has an implementation of the search algorithm, and the other ones just wrap around the first one:

Object findObjectOrNull(String key);
Object findObjectOrThrow(String key) throws SomeException;
Object findObjectOrCreate(String key, SomeClass dataNeededToCreateNewObject);
Object findObjectOrDefault(String key, Object defaultReturnValue);

Even if you choose to provide only one implementation, you might want to use a naming convention like that to clarify your contract, and it helps you should you ever decide to add other implementations as well.

You should not overuse it, but it may be helpfull, espeacially when writing a helper Class which you will use in hundreds of different applications with many different error handling conventions.

5
  • I like the clear function names, especially orCreate and orDefault. Jul 14, 2015 at 9:10
  • 5
    Most of this can be more cleanly written with Expected<T> findObject(String) where Expected<T> has the functions orNull(), orThrow(), orSupplied(Supplier<T> supplier), orDefault(T default). This abstracts the getting of the data from the error handling Oct 6, 2015 at 2:39
  • I didn't know about Expected<T> until now. I seems to be pretty new and might not have existed when I wrote the original answer. Maybe you should make your comment a proper answer. Oct 6, 2015 at 11:57
  • Also, Expected<T> is a C++ template. Are there implementations of it in other object oriented languages as well? Oct 6, 2015 at 11:58
  • In Java 8, returning Optional<T> (called Maybe<T>, etc. in other languages) is an option as well. This clearly indicates to the caller that returning nothing is a possibility, and won't compile if the caller hasn't handled that possibility, as opposed to null, which (in Java anyway) will compile even if the caller doesn't check it.
    – Some Guy
    Jan 22, 2019 at 12:54
20

Use the null object pattern or throw an exception.

10
  • This is the real answer. Returning null is a terrible habit of lazy programmers. May 23, 2013 at 19:01
  • I can't believe this answer hasn't been voted to the top yet. This IS the real answer, and either approach is dead-easy and saves a lot of code-bloat or NPEs.
    – Bane
    Sep 6, 2013 at 13:16
  • 3
    If one uses the null object pattern, how would one distinguish the case where the key is mapped to the null object from the case where the key has no mapping? I would think returning a meaningless object would be far worse than returning null. Returning null to code that's not prepared to handle it will generally result in an exception being thrown. Not the optimal choice of exception, but an exception nonetheless. Returning a meaningless object is more likely to result in the code incorrectly regarding meaningless data as correct.
    – supercat
    Oct 4, 2014 at 22:25
  • 3
    How would the null object behave for an entity lookup? E.g., Person somePerson = personRepository.find("does-not-exist"); Let's assume this method returns a null object for ID does-not-exist. What would then be the correct behavior for somePerson.getAge()? Right now, I'm not yet convinced the null object pattern is the right solution for entity lookups.
    – Abdull
    Jun 15, 2015 at 15:23
18

Advantages of throwing an exception:

  1. Cleaner control flow in your calling code. Checking for null injects a conditional branch which is natively handled by try/catch. Checking for null doesn't indicate what it is you're checking for - are you checking for null because you're looking for an error you're expecting, or are you checking for null so you don't pass it further on downchain?
  2. Removes ambiguity of what "null" means. Is null representative of an error or is null what is actually stored in the value? Hard to say when you only have one thing to base that determination off of.
  3. Improved consistency between method behavior in an application. Exceptions are typically exposed in method signatures, so you're more able to understand what edge cases the methods in an application account for, and what information your application can react to in a predictable manner.

For more explanation with examples, see: http://metatations.com/2011/11/17/returning-null-vs-throwing-an-exception/

3
  • 2
    +1 because point 2 is excellent - null does not have the the same meaning as not found. This become more important when dealing with dynamic languages where Null could actually be the object being stored/retrieved by the function - and in that case Oct 13, 2015 at 4:17
  • 1
    +1 for point #2. Is null an error? Is null what is stored for the given key? Is null indicative that the key does not exist? These are the real line of questions that make it clear returning null is almost never correct. This is likely the best answer here as everyone else has just been throwing up the ambiguous "If it's exceptional, throw"
    – crush
    Aug 9, 2018 at 16:37
  • Exceptions may incur a performance penalty compared to returns (e.g. in Java), though. And unchecked exceptions (e.g. in Java) may surface in unintended places.
    – tkruse
    Nov 19, 2020 at 4:54
13

Be consistent with the API(s) you're using.

0
13

Just ask yourself: "is it an exceptional case that the object is not found"? If it is expected to happen in the normal course of your program, you probably should not raise an exception (since it is not exceptional behavior).

Short version: use exceptions to handle exceptional behavior, not to handle normal flow of control in your program.

-Alan.

13

it depends if your language and code promotes: LBYL (look before you leap) or EAFP (easier to ask forgiveness than permission)

LBYL says you should check for values (so return a null)
EAFP says to just try the operation and see if it fails (throw an exception)

though I agree with above.. exceptions should be used for exceptional/error conditions, and returning a null is best when using checks.


EAFP vs. LBYL in Python:
http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-list/2003-May/205182.html (Web Archive)

1
  • 3
    In some cases, EAFP is the only meaningful approach. In a concurrent map/dictionary, for example, there's no way to ask whether a mapping will exist when it is requested.
    – supercat
    Oct 4, 2014 at 22:26
6

Exceptions are related to Design by Contract.

The interface of an objects is actually a contract between two objects, the caller must meet the contract or else the receiver may just fail with an exception. There are two possible contracts

1) all input the method is valid, in which case you must return null when the object is not found.

2) only some input is valid, ie that which results in a found object. In which case you MUST offer a second method that allows the caller to determine if its input will be correct. For example

is_present(key)
find(key) throws Exception

IF and ONLY IF you provide both methods of the 2nd contract, you are allowed to throw an exception is nothing is found!

4

I prefer to just return a null, and rely on the caller to handle it appropriately. The (for lack of a better word) exception is if I am absolutely 'certain' this method will return an object. In that case a failure is an exceptional should and should throw.

4

Depends on what it means that the object is not found.

If it's a normal state of affairs, then return null. This is just something that might happen once in an while, and the callers should check for it.

If it's an error, then throw an exception, the callers should decide what to do with the error condition of missing object.

Ultimately either would work, although most people generally consider it good practice to only use Exceptions when something, well, Exceptional has happened.

2
  • 2
    How would you elaborate on the "normal state of affairs" statement and what criteria will you use to distinguish it with an error. Jun 14, 2018 at 13:46
  • @user1451111 I found a relevant discussion on Software Engineering about what the normal state of affairs is Nov 29, 2021 at 13:27
4

Here are a couple more suggestions.

If returning a collection, avoid returning null, return an empty collection which makes enumeration easier to deal with without a null check first.

Several .NET API's use the pattern of a thrownOnError parameter which gives the caller the choice as whether it is really an exceptional situation or not if the object is not found. Type.GetType is an example of this. Another common pattern with BCL is the TryGet pattern where a boolean is returned and the value is passed via an output parameter.

You could also consider the Null Object pattern in some circumstances which can either be a default or a version with no behaviour. The key is avoid null checks throughout the code base. See here for more information Link

3

In some functions I add a parameter:

..., bool verify = true)

True means throw, false means return some error return value. This way, whoever uses this function has both options. The default should be true, for the benefit of those who forget about error handling.

3

Return a null instead of throwing an exception and clearly document the possibility of a null return value in the API documentation. If the calling code doesn't honor the API and check for the null case, it will most probably result in some sort of "null pointer exception" anyway :)

In C++, I can think of 3 different flavors of setting up a method that finds an object.

Option A

Object *findObject(Key &key);

Return null when an object can't be found. Nice and simple. I'd go with this one. The alternative approaches below are for people who don't hate out-params.

Option B

void findObject(Key &key, Object &found);

Pass in a reference to variable that will be receiving the object. The method thrown an exception when an object can't be found. This convention is probably more suitable if it's not really expected for an object not to be found -- hence you throw an exception to signify that it's an unexpected case.

Option C

bool findObject(Key &key, Object &found);

The method returns false when an object can't be found. The advantage of this over option A is that you can check for the error case in one clear step:

if (!findObject(myKey, myObj)) { ...
3

referring only to the case where null is not considered an exceptional behavior i am definitely for the try method, it is clear, no need to "read the book" or "look before you leap" as was said here

so basically:

bool TryFindObject(RequestParam request, out ResponseParam response)

and this means that the user's code will also be clear

...
if(TryFindObject(request, out response)
{
  handleSuccess(response)
}
else
{
  handleFailure()
}
...
2

If it's important for client code to know the difference between found and not found and this is supposed to be a routine behavior, then it's best to return null. Client code can then decide what to do.

2

Generally it should return null. The code calling the method should decide whether to throw an exception or to attempt something else.

2

Or return an Option

An option is basically a container class that forces the client to handle booth cases. Scala has this concept, look up it's API.

Then you have methods like T getOrElse(T valueIfNull) on this object thet either return the found object, or an allternative the client specifieces.

2

Prefer returning null --

If the caller uses it without checking, the exception happens right there anyway.

If the caller doesn't really use it, don't tax him a try/catch block

2

Unfortunately JDK is inconsistent, if you trying access non existing key in resource bundle, you get not found exception and when you request value from map you get null if it doesn't exists. So I would change winner answer to the following, if found value can be null, then raise exception when it isn't found, otherwise return null. So follow to the rule with one exception, if you need to know why value isn't found then always raise exception, or..

2

If the method returns a collection, then return an empty collection (like sayed above). But please not Collections.EMPTY_LIST or such! (in case of Java)

If the method retrives a single object, then You have some options.

  1. If the method should always find the result and it's a real exception case not to find the object, then you should throw an exception (in Java: please an unchecked Exception)
  2. (Java only) If you can tolerate that the method throws a checked exception, throw a project specific ObjectNotFoundException or the like. In this case the compiler says you if you forget to handle the exception. (This is my preferred handling of not found things in Java.)
  3. If you say it's really ok, if the object is not found and your Method name is like findBookForAuthorOrReturnNull(..), then you can return null. In this case it is strongly recomminded to use some sort of static check or compiler check, wich prevents dereferencing of the result without a null check. In case of Java it can be eg. FindBugs (see DefaultAnnotation at http://findbugs.sourceforge.net/manual/annotations.html) or IntelliJ-Checking.

Be careful, if you decide to return a null. If you are not the only programmer in project you will get NullPointerExceptions (in Java or whatever in other Languages) at run time! So don't return nulls which are not checked at compile time.

8
  • Not if the code was properly written to expect null. See top-voted answer for more. Aug 21, 2012 at 13:19
  • But only if you ensure at compile time, that all nulls are checked. This can be done, using FindBugs @NutNull at package level and mark your method as "may return null". Or to use a language like Kotlin or Nice. But it is much more simplier not to return null.
    – iuzuz
    Aug 21, 2012 at 13:44
  • "Simpler", maybe. But often plain incorrect Aug 21, 2012 at 13:46
  • 1
    Again: Read the top-voted answer for more information. Basically: If it's a potentially-expected result that the book requested can't be found, an exception is the wrong thing to do when the requested book is simply not found, as opposed to some error occurring. Aug 21, 2012 at 14:01
  • 1
    You are misunderstanding a lot here. You are applying conditional advice universally, which is almost always a bad thing to do. Read the rest of the up voted answers, too. Your answer just states an absolute, and presents extremely faulty logic for it. Aug 21, 2012 at 16:40
1

As long as it's supposed to return a reference to the object, returning a NULL should be good.

However, if it's returning the whole bloody thing (like in C++ if you do: 'return blah;' rather than 'return &blah;' (or 'blah' is a pointer), then you can't return a NULL, because it's not of type 'object'. In that case, throwing an exception, or returning a blank object that doesn't have a success flag set is how I would approach the problem.

1

Don't think anyone mentioned the overhead in exception handling - takes additional resources to load up and process the exception so unless its a true app killing or process stopping event (going forward would cause more harm than good) I would opt for passing back a value the calling environment could interpret as it sees fit.

1

I agree with what seems to be the consensus here (return null if "not found" is a normal possible outcome, or throw an exception if the semantics of the situation require that the object always be found).

There is, however, a third possibility that might make sense depending on your particular situation. Your method could return a default object of some sort in the "not found" condition, allowing calling code to be assured that it will always receive a valid object without the need for null checking or exception catching.

1

Return a null, exceptions are exactly that: something your code does that isn't expected.

1

Exceptions should be exceptional. Return null if it is valid to return a null.

1
1

If you are using a library or another class which throws an exception, you should rethrow it. Here is an example. Example2.java is like library and Example.java uses it's object. Main.java is an example to handle this Exception. You should show a meaningful message and (if needed) stack trace to the user in the calling side.

Main.java

public class Main {
public static void main(String[] args) {
    Example example = new Example();

    try {
        Example2 obj = example.doExample();

        if(obj == null){
            System.out.println("Hey object is null!");
        }
    } catch (Exception e) {
        System.out.println("Congratulations, you caught the exception!");
        System.out.println("Here is stack trace:");
        e.printStackTrace();
    }
}
}

Example.java

/**
 * Example.java
 * @author Seval
 * @date 10/22/2014
 */
public class Example {
    /**
     * Returns Example2 object
     * If there is no Example2 object, throws exception
     * 
     * @return obj Example2
     * @throws Exception
     */
    public Example2 doExample() throws Exception {
        try {
            // Get the object
            Example2 obj = new Example2();

            return obj;

        } catch (Exception e) {
            // Log the exception and rethrow
            // Log.logException(e);
            throw e;
        }

    }
}

Example2.java

 /**
 * Example2.java
 * @author Seval
 *
 */
public class Example2 {
    /**
     * Constructor of Example2
     * @throws Exception
     */
    public Example2() throws Exception{
        throw new Exception("Please set the \"obj\"");
    }

}
1
  • If the exception to be thrown from the function is not a runtime exception, and the caller is expected to handle it (instead of just terminating the program), then instead of throwing an exception from an internal subsystem that the caller can't expect, it would be better to wrap the internal exception with an external checked exception, while 'chaining' the internal exception so that someone debugging can figure out why the external exception was thrown. For instance, example1 could use 'throw new MyCheckedException("Please set the \"obj\"", e)' to include 'e' in the thrown exception.
    – Some Guy
    Jan 22, 2019 at 12:49
0

That really depends on if you expect to find the object, or not. If you follow the school of thought that exceptions should be used for indicating something, well, err, exceptional has occured then:

  • Object found; return object
  • Object not-found; throw exception

Otherwise, return null.

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