So just out of curiosity I wanted to see what was special about the exception class that allowed it to be used with the keyword Throw
while a standard class is not.
All I found is that the Exception class implemented the following
public class Exception : System.Object, System.Runtime.Serialization.ISerializable, System.Runtime.InteropServices._Exception
{
}
So I tried implementing those same interfaces and attempting to throw my own custom exception that did not derive from System.Exception
to no avail. I was simply advised that
The type caught or thrown must be derived from
System.Exception
So is there any specific reason for this? I assume there is as few choices in managed languages seem to be arbitrary.
throw
rather than the classException
.