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Are constructors allowed to throw exceptions?

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7 Answers 7

363

Yes, constructors can throw exceptions. Usually this means that the new object is immediately eligible for garbage collection (although it may not be collected for some time, of course). It's possible for the "half-constructed" object to stick around though, if it's made itself visible earlier in the constructor (e.g. by assigning a static field, or adding itself to a collection).

One thing to be careful of about throwing exceptions in the constructor: because the caller (usually) will have no way of using the new object, the constructor ought to be careful to avoid acquiring unmanaged resources (file handles etc) and then throwing an exception without releasing them. For example, if the constructor tries to open a FileInputStream and a FileOutputStream, and the first succeeds but the second fails, you should try to close the first stream. This becomes harder if it's a subclass constructor which throws the exception, of course... it all becomes a bit tricky. It's not a problem very often, but it's worth considering.

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  • 32
    +1. No one usually thinks of exceptions thrown by subclasses. Sep 3, 2009 at 5:38
  • 4
    @Tarik: Well the code example would do exactly that - e.g. someStaticField = this; or someCollection.add(this) within a constructor.
    – Jon Skeet
    Jan 3, 2015 at 18:48
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    @jonSkeet, Syntactically a constructor can throw and can declare that it can throw. However, should a constructor throw? What is the best practice here?
    – virusrocks
    May 16, 2015 at 17:42
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    @baris.aydinoz: Completely disagree. If you provide invalid arguments to a constructor, I'd expect it to throw - not doing so would be the smell at that point.
    – Jon Skeet
    Sep 8, 2016 at 8:15
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    @Ghilteras: Whereas I'd definitely rather express errors through the language-idiomatic way of expressing them: which is through exceptions in Java. To my mind, avoiding that idiom is where code gymnastics come in. Likewise mocking is far more effective when you've already used dependency injection rather than calling the constructor within the code. After all, when you call a constructor you're constraining yourself to that implementation, whereas the point of mocking is generally to mock an interface or abstract class, rather than using the implementation class at all.
    – Jon Skeet
    Nov 12, 2018 at 21:09
79

Yes, they can throw exceptions. If so, they will only be partially initialized and if non-final, subject to attack.

The following is from the Secure Coding Guidelines 2.0.

Partially initialized instances of a non-final class can be accessed via a finalizer attack. The attacker overrides the protected finalize method in a subclass, and attempts to create a new instance of that subclass. This attempt fails (in the above example, the SecurityManager check in ClassLoader's constructor throws a security exception), but the attacker simply ignores any exception and waits for the virtual machine to perform finalization on the partially initialized object. When that occurs the malicious finalize method implementation is invoked, giving the attacker access to this, a reference to the object being finalized. Although the object is only partially initialized, the attacker can still invoke methods on it (thereby circumventing the SecurityManager check).

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    Does this means throwing from non-final class is a security breach? Is this still an issue?
    – kroiz
    Feb 1, 2015 at 21:35
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    Note that this guideline is only relevant if your code is, or is likely to be used in a context where security is important. For example, most Java code is used in contexts where there is no SecurityManager.
    – Stephen C
    Jan 16, 2016 at 0:12
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    This problem can be circumvented by checking before calling the super constructor. As when you throw at this point, finalize() will never be called. Further, you should always check all values before assigning any values to instance fields, as that way, “partially initialized” mean “unusable”, hence, no security risk.
    – Holger
    Jun 5, 2018 at 6:26
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Absolutely.

If the constructor doesn't receive valid input, or can't construct the object in a valid manner, it has no other option but to throw an exception and alert its caller.

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Yes, it can throw an exception and you can declare that in the signature of the constructor too as shown in the example below:

public class ConstructorTest
{
    public ConstructorTest() throws InterruptedException
    {
        System.out.println("Preparing object....");
        Thread.sleep(1000);
        System.out.println("Object ready");
    }

    public static void main(String ... args)
    {
        try
        {
            ConstructorTest test = new ConstructorTest();
        }
        catch (InterruptedException e)
        {
            System.out.println("Got interrupted...");
        }
    }
}
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12

Yes, constructors are allowed to throw exceptions.

However, be very wise in choosing what exceptions they should be - checked exceptions or unchecked. Unchecked exceptions are basically subclasses of RuntimeException.

In almost all cases (I could not come up with an exception to this case), you'll need to throw a checked exception. The reason being that unchecked exceptions (like NullPointerException) are normally due to programming errors (like not validating inputs sufficiently).

The advantage that a checked exception offers is that the programmer is forced to catch the exception in his instantiation code, and thereby realizes that there can be a failure to create the object instance. Of course, only a code review will catch the poor programming practice of swallowing an exception.

9

Yes.

Constructors are nothing more than special methods, and can throw exceptions like any other method.

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  • The important thing in your statement is "special methods". So they are not like any other method. Throwing an exception from a non-final class' constructor could create a security hole, so special care should be taken when deciding to do this. See the answer by @Billy above, with the extract from Java Secure Coding Guidelines. Mar 4, 2015 at 23:35
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Yes, constructors to allow to throw an exception.

Before object creation, there are some scenario's like we can send parameters to the constructors(parameterized constructors) the parameters validation should be handled in the constructors and to throw the validation exception.

Security checks are another common use case for throwing exceptions in the constructor. Some of the objects need security checks during their creation. We can throw exceptions if the constructor performs a possibly unsafe or sensitive operation.

Example:-

public class Employee{
     private String name;
     private Integer age;
     public Employee(String name, Integer age) throws Exception{
         if (StringUtils.isEmpty(name)){
             throw new Exception("Name can not be empty");
         }
         if (age == null || age  100){
              throw new Exception("Entered age is not a valid one");
         }
         this.name = name;
         this.age = age;
    }
}

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