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I am almost positive that the answer is YES. If I use a Try Finally block but do not use a Catch block then any exceptions WILL bubble. Correct?

Any thoughts on the practice in general?

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  • So... what is 'bubble'? Will it throw or hide? Dec 16, 2021 at 21:27

2 Answers 2

155

Yes, it absolutely will. Assuming your finally block doesn't throw an exception, of course, in which case that will effectively "replace" the one that was originally thrown.

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    @David: You can't return from a finally block in C#.
    – Jon Skeet
    Dec 1, 2010 at 17:20
  • 3
    msdn documentation also confirms this answer: Alternatively, you can catch the exception that might be thrown in the try block of a try-finally statement higher up the call stack. That is, you can catch the exception in the method that calls the method that contains the try-finally statement, or in the method that calls that method, or in any method in the call stack. If the exception is not caught, execution of the finally block depends on whether the operating system chooses to trigger an exception unwind operation.
    – broadband
    May 22, 2014 at 8:31
66

Any thoughts on the practice in general?

Yes. Be careful. When your finally block is running, it is entirely possible that it is running because an unhandled, unexpected exception has been thrown. That means that something is broken, and something completely unexpected could be happening.

In that situation it is arguably the case that you shouldn't run code in finally blocks at all. The code in the finally block might be built to assume that subsystems it depends upon are healthy, when in fact they could be deeply broken. The code in the finally block could make things worse.

For example, I often see this sort of thing:

DisableAccessToTheResource();
try
{
    DoSomethingToTheResource();
}
finally
{
    EnableAccessToTheResource();
}

The author of this code is thinking "I am making a temporary mutation to the state of the world; I need to restore the state to what it was before I was called". But let's think about all the ways this could go wrong.

First, access to the resource could already be disabled by the caller; in that case, this code re-enables it, possibly prematurely.

Second, if DoSomethingToTheResource throws an exception, is the right thing to do to enable access to the resource??? The code that manages the resource is unexpectedly broken. This code says, in effect "if the management code is broken, make sure that other code can call that broken code as soon as possible, so that it can fail horribly too." This seems like a bad idea.

Third, if DoSomethingToTheResource throws an exception, then how do we know that EnableAccessToTheResource will not also throw an exception? Whatever awfulness befell the use of the resource might also affect the cleanup code, in which case the original exception will be lost and the problem will be harder to diagnose.

I tend to write code like this without using try-finally blocks:

bool wasDisabled = IsAccessDisabled();
if (!wasDisabled)
    DisableAccessToTheResource();
DoSomethingToTheResource();
if (!wasDisabled)
    EnableAccessToTheResource();

Now the state is not mutated unless it needs to be. Now the caller's state is not messed around with. And now, if DoSomethingToTheResource fails, then we do not re-enable access. We assume that something is deeply broken and do not risk making the situation worse by trying to keep running code. Let the caller deal with the problem, if they can.

So when is it a good idea to run a finally block? First, when the exception is expected. For example, you might expect that an attempt to lock a file might fail, because someone else has it locked. In that case it makes sense to catch the exception and report it to the user. In that case the uncertainty about what is broken is reduced; you are unlikely to make things worse by cleaning up.

Second, when the resource you are cleaning up is a scarce system resource. For example, it makes sense to close a file handle in a finally block. (A "using" is of course just another way of writing a try-finally block.) The contents of the file might be corrupt, but there's nothing you can do about that now. The file handle is going to be closed eventually, so it might as well be sooner rather than later.

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  • 8
    Yet more examples of how we really haven't got our act together yet as an industry when it comes to error handling. Not that I have anything better to suggest than exceptions, but I'm hoping the future holds something more likely to lead to the right course of action being taken reasonably easily.
    – Jon Skeet
    Nov 29, 2010 at 17:42
  • In vb.net, it's possible for code in a Finally block to know what exception is pending. If one sets up an exception hierarchy to distinguish "didn't do it; state otherwise okay" from "state is broken", one could have a Finally block only run if the pending exception isn't one of the bad ones. I like to have disposer/cleanup routines catch exceptions and throw a DisposerFailedException (which is in the "bad" category, and includes original exception as an InnerException). I'd like to see a standard iDisposableEx interface with a Dispose(Ex as Exception) to facilitate that.
    – supercat
    Nov 29, 2010 at 19:51
  • While I appreciate that there are cases where an exception may occur while an object is in a bad state and attempted cleanup will make things worse, I think such issues should be handled in the cleanup code, possibly with the help of delegates. A lock wrapper, for example, could expose an "CheckIfSafeToUnlock(Ex as Exception)" function delegate which could be set at times when the locked object is in an invalid state and cleared otherwise. Before releasing the lock, the wrapper could check the delegate; if non-empty, it could run it and release the lock only if it returns true.
    – supercat
    Nov 29, 2010 at 20:05
  • Having a wrapper use such a delegate would allow the code which manipulated the object state to select appropriate cleanup action if it's disrupted. Such actions might include repairing the data structure and returning True, throwing another "more severe" exception which wraps the original one, or letting the original exception percolate while returning False.
    – supercat
    Nov 29, 2010 at 20:08
  • 2
    Eric, thanks for your great answer. I guess I should have asked two questions because both you and Jon are correct. In any case, you are upvoted. Thanks for your attention to the question. Nov 30, 2010 at 0:39

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