If I've got the function below, with two choices
private MyObject findBlank() {
for (int i = 0; i < pieces.length; i++) {
if(pieces[i].isBlank()){
return pieces[i];
}
}
return null;
}
private MyObject findBlank() {
for (int i = 0; i < pieces.length; i++) {
if(pieces[i].isBlank()){
return pieces[i];
}
}
throw new NoSuchFieldError("No blank piece found!");
}
From this method I know that it should always return an object one of the 'pieces' always is isBlank() == true
, the return null at the end is just to please the compiler. Since this is the case and my code wouldn't work anyway if it returned null, is this the correct please to throw an exception?
My options are:
- return null and the app will get a NullPointerException in some edge case
- return null and wrap the use of the method with (myObject != null) checks
- throw an exception which will blow it up at runtime
I guess what I'm asking is, is this the correct place to throw an exception? i.e. there is nothing I can do about it if it gets into the situation. Is this classed as 'exceptional' or should I null check what my method returns (which makes my code look horrible). If I know it shouldn't return null then I should throw the exception right?
Also how would I choose what exception, or extend one and throw my own?