1715

What is the easiest way to convert the result of Throwable.getStackTrace() to a string that depicts the stacktrace?

12
  • 8
    Because jqno's answer actually uses the Throwable.getStackTrace() method that you specified in your question, whereas Brian doesn't. He uses Throwable.printStackTrace() instead. Jan 31, 2012 at 18:45
  • 10
    Just about every Java project should include Apache commons-lang. It includes many convenience methods implementing extremely common development needs. Aug 15, 2013 at 21:32
  • 20
    @StijndeWitt Those three lines of code almost certainly need factoring out of the place you've called them. Since you don't know where to put them, they'll go in your utility toolbox with all the other useful snippets. Bingo! you've just reinvented guava / commons-lang / whatever... only not so well. Import a sensible utilities library instead, and save reinventing the wheel. The true sign of a novice is thinking you can do a better job than the library writers. Oct 22, 2013 at 8:12
  • 9
    1. Guava has - Throwables.getStackTraceAsString(e) 2. Apache Commons Lang - ExceptionUtils.getFullStackTrace 3. Write our own custom methods Mar 10, 2014 at 10:52
  • 16
    @AndrewSpencer I don't understand why you guys try so hard to bash StijndeWitt for wanting to achieve this with some small snippet. There is really not much danger in writing a tiny utility method (I don't see it as "SHEER ARROGANCE oh nooooo!! he thinks he's better than Apache!!"). There are tons of projects especially in non-Java JVM languages that really don't want to include Guava or Commons Lang just to log a stacktrace. I write Scala & Clojure libraries and certainly will not be making Apache Commons Lang a transitive dependency just for one method.
    – jm0
    Mar 2, 2016 at 16:30

32 Answers 32

2367

Use Throwable.printStackTrace(PrintWriter pw) to send the stack trace to an appropriate writer.

import java.io.StringWriter;
import java.io.PrintWriter;

// ...

StringWriter sw = new StringWriter();
PrintWriter pw = new PrintWriter(sw);
e.printStackTrace(pw);
String sStackTrace = sw.toString(); // stack trace as a string
System.out.println(sStackTrace);
7
  • 9
    This does trim the stack trace, the same way printStackTrace(). All exceptions in the stack are visible but for each exception the stack may be trimmed. Anyone requiring the entire trace should consider this. Nov 29, 2013 at 20:20
  • 9
    This, as it turns out, is pretty much exactly what apache's ExceptionUtils.getStackTrace() method does. Almost to the letter actually.
    – ticktock
    Mar 4, 2014 at 22:30
  • 7
    @BrianAgnew, shouldn't you close the StringWriter and PrintWriter ? Aug 2, 2015 at 21:07
  • 6
    @MuhammadGelbana - yes. The above is shown for expediency. I suspect if you don't it wouldn't cause a problem, but I would advocate it on grounds of good practise Aug 3, 2015 at 8:42
  • 17
    @BrianAgnew, thanks for the reply. It got me curious and here is what I found: stackoverflow.com/questions/14542535/… Aug 3, 2015 at 9:31
1142

One can use the following method to convert an Exception stack trace to String. This class is available in Apache commons-lang which is most common dependent library with many popular open sources

org.apache.commons.lang.exception.ExceptionUtils.getStackTrace(Throwable)

6
  • 89
    @Stijn - to be fair (I wrote the current highest voted answer below) it's worth looking at commons-lang for a lot more functionality Jan 31, 2012 at 10:10
  • 55
    @StijndeWitt Commons Lang is pretty common. It's already present in most of my projects/proyects at work.
    – WhyNotHugo
    May 21, 2012 at 14:54
  • 17
    @Hugo thanks, was going to use the StringWriter to avoid adding a new library--turns out it's already a dependency of 3 of my dependencies. So to the rest, check if you have it already.
    – Nathanial
    Apr 10, 2013 at 0:53
  • 35
    @MartinAsenov - following your logic you'd never use such a library, would you ? You wouldn't use it unless you're already using it ? Aug 28, 2013 at 16:31
  • 19
    Fyi, the package has changed and the class is now at: org.apache.commons.lang3.exception.ExceptionUtils.
    – schmmd
    Nov 13, 2013 at 23:18
505

This should work:

StringWriter sw = new StringWriter();
e.printStackTrace(new PrintWriter(sw));
String exceptionAsString = sw.toString();
8
  • 87
    Concise in java context is always hillarious. That printStackTrace should just return string, leaving decision on whether print it or not to user :)
    – dmitry
    Jul 14, 2015 at 11:14
  • 53
    printStackTrace printing in the console is acceptable, but at least a getStackTrace returning it as a String should be available by default Oct 13, 2016 at 18:32
  • 7
    What part of this is concise? You have to construct 2 objects which exist for no purpose other than to put the stack trace into a string. Nov 14, 2016 at 23:02
  • 9
    @dmitry A method called printXXX() should print XXX.
    – user207421
    Aug 11, 2017 at 5:56
  • 2
    @Greg Actually that wasn't even sarcasm, it just required a plain reading of what he said.
    – Andrew
    Oct 13, 2017 at 16:08
267

If you are developing for Android, a far easier way is to use this:

import android.util.Log;

String stackTrace = Log.getStackTraceString(exception); 

The format is the same as getStacktrace, for e.g.

09-24 16:09:07.042: I/System.out(4844): java.lang.NullPointerException
09-24 16:09:07.042: I/System.out(4844):   at com.temp.ttscancel.MainActivity.onCreate(MainActivity.java:43)
09-24 16:09:07.042: I/System.out(4844):   at android.app.Activity.performCreate(Activity.java:5248)
09-24 16:09:07.043: I/System.out(4844):   at android.app.Instrumentation.callActivityOnCreate(Instrumentation.java:1110)
09-24 16:09:07.043: I/System.out(4844):   at android.app.ActivityThread.performLaunchActivity(ActivityThread.java:2162)
09-24 16:09:07.043: I/System.out(4844):   at android.app.ActivityThread.handleLaunchActivity(ActivityThread.java:2257)
09-24 16:09:07.043: I/System.out(4844):   at android.app.ActivityThread.access$800(ActivityThread.java:139)
09-24 16:09:07.043: I/System.out(4844):   at android.app.ActivityThread$H.handleMessage(ActivityThread.java:1210)
09-24 16:09:07.043: I/System.out(4844):   at android.os.Handler.dispatchMessage(Handler.java:102)
09-24 16:09:07.043: I/System.out(4844):   at android.os.Looper.loop(Looper.java:136)
09-24 16:09:07.044: I/System.out(4844):   at android.app.ActivityThread.main(ActivityThread.java:5097)
09-24 16:09:07.044: I/System.out(4844):   at java.lang.reflect.Method.invokeNative(Native Method)
09-24 16:09:07.044: I/System.out(4844):   at java.lang.reflect.Method.invoke(Method.java:515)
09-24 16:09:07.044: I/System.out(4844):   at com.android.internal.os.ZygoteInit$MethodAndArgsCaller.run(ZygoteInit.java:785)
09-24 16:09:07.044: I/System.out(4844):   at com.android.internal.os.ZygoteInit.main(ZygoteInit.java:601)
1
156

Guava's Throwables class

If you have the actual Throwable instance, Google Guava provides Throwables.getStackTraceAsString().

Example:

String s = Throwables.getStackTraceAsString ( myException ) ;

This uses printStackTrace under the covers so it outputs a recurisve, trimmed stack trace (i.e., one where frames common to multiple causes in the cause chain are printed only once).

0
120

WARNING: Does not include cause (which is usually the useful bit!)

public String stackTraceToString(Throwable e) {
    StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder();
    for (StackTraceElement element : e.getStackTrace()) {
        sb.append(element.toString());
        sb.append("\n");
    }
    return sb.toString();
}
0
108

For me the cleanest and easiest way was:

import java.util.Arrays;
Arrays.toString(e.getStackTrace());
2
  • 43
    The code is clean, but the output is not. You have to do a .replaceAll(", ", "\n") in the end. However you lose the indentation that printStackTrace proposes.
    – fury
    Jan 9, 2012 at 4:03
  • 6
    This is useful when you log trace in a single line
    – webjockey
    Jan 24, 2017 at 21:23
30
public static String getStackTrace(Throwable t) {
    StringWriter sw = new StringWriter();
    t.printStackTrace(new PrintWriter(sw));
    return sw.toString();
}
1
  • 1
    Hi, I would just like to point out that the comments section of the answer being cited points out that the StringWriter and PrintWriter objects ought to be closed....(or i guess only the PrintWriter needs to be closed since closing it should close the StringWriter too)
    – Eric
    Aug 16, 2016 at 2:38
27

The following code allows you to get the entire stackTrace with a String format, without using APIs like log4J or even java.util.Logger:

catch (Exception e) {
    StackTraceElement[] stack = e.getStackTrace();
    String exception = "";
    for (StackTraceElement s : stack) {
        exception = exception + s.toString() + "\n\t\t";
    }
    System.out.println(exception);
    // then you can send the exception string to a external file.
}
0
24

Here is a version that is copy-pastable directly into code:

import java.io.StringWriter; 
import java.io.PrintWriter;

//Two lines of code to get the exception into a StringWriter
StringWriter sw = new StringWriter();
new Throwable().printStackTrace(new PrintWriter(sw));

//And to actually print it
logger.info("Current stack trace is:\n" + sw.toString());

Or, in a catch block

} catch (Throwable t) {
    StringWriter sw = new StringWriter();
    t.printStackTrace(new PrintWriter(sw));
    logger.info("Current stack trace is:\n" + sw.toString());
}
0
24

Print the stack trace to a PrintStream, then convert it to a String:

// ...

catch (Exception e)
{
    ByteArrayOutputStream out = new ByteArrayOutputStream(); 
    e.printStackTrace(new PrintStream(out));
    String str = new String(out.toByteArray());

    System.out.println(str);
}
0
21
Arrays.toString(thrown.getStackTrace())

Is the easiest way to convert the result into String I am using this in my program to print the stack trace

LOGGER.log(Level.SEVERE, "Query Builder Issue Stack Trace : {0} ,Message : {1} objid {2}", new Object[]{Arrays.toString(e.getStackTrace()), e.getMessage(),objId});
0
19

Kotlin >= 1.4

Use the built-in function stackTraceToString() on a Throwable.

Kotlin < 1.4

Extending the Throwable class will give you the String property error.stackTraceString:

val Throwable.stackTraceString: String
  get() {
    val sw = StringWriter()
    val pw = PrintWriter(sw)
    this.printStackTrace(pw)
    return sw.toString()
  }
1
14

if you are using Java 8, try this

Arrays.stream(e.getStackTrace())
                .map(s->s.toString())
                .collect(Collectors.joining("\n"));

you can find the code for getStackTrace() function provided by Throwable.java as :

public StackTraceElement[] getStackTrace() {
    return getOurStackTrace().clone();
}

and for StackTraceElement, it provides toString() as follows:

public String toString() {
    return getClassName() + "." + methodName +
        (isNativeMethod() ? "(Native Method)" :
         (fileName != null && lineNumber >= 0 ?
          "(" + fileName + ":" + lineNumber + ")" :
          (fileName != null ?  "("+fileName+")" : "(Unknown Source)")));
}

So just join the StackTraceElement with "\n".

1
  • And if you want limit it, you can use the method limit(5) on the stream.
    – Maik
    Nov 4, 2021 at 18:19
13

Printing stack trace to string

import java.io.PrintWriter;
import java.io.StringWriter;

public class StackTraceUtils {
    public static String stackTraceToString(StackTraceElement[] stackTrace) {
        StringWriter sw = new StringWriter();
        printStackTrace(stackTrace, new PrintWriter(sw));
        return sw.toString();
    }
    public static void printStackTrace(StackTraceElement[] stackTrace, PrintWriter pw) {
        for(StackTraceElement stackTraceEl : stackTrace) {
            pw.println(stackTraceEl);
        }
    }
}

It's useful when you want to print the current thread stack trace without creating instance of Throwable - but note that creating new Throwable and getting stack trace from there is actually faster and cheaper than calling Thread.getStackTrace.

11
private String getCurrentStackTraceString() {
    StackTraceElement[] stackTrace = Thread.currentThread().getStackTrace();
    return Arrays.stream(stackTrace).map(StackTraceElement::toString)
            .collect(Collectors.joining("\n"));
}
0
10

Code from Apache Commons Lang 3.4 (JavaDoc):

public static String getStackTrace(final Throwable throwable) {
    final StringWriter sw = new StringWriter();
    final PrintWriter pw = new PrintWriter(sw, true);
    throwable.printStackTrace(pw);
    return sw.getBuffer().toString();
}

The difference with the other answers is that it uses autoFlush on the PrintWriter.

9

The clever sniping in the first set of comments was very amusing, but it really depends on what you are trying to do. If you don't already have the correct library, then 3 lines of code (as in D. Wroblewski's answer) is perfect. OTOH, if you already have the apache.commons library (as most large projects will), then Amar's answer is shorter. OK, it might take you ten minutes to get the library and install it correctly (less than one if you know what you're doing). But the clock is ticking, so you may not have the time to spare. Jarek Przygódzki had an interesting caveat--"If you don't need nested exceptions".

But what if I do need the full stack traces, nested and all? In that case, the secret is to use apache.common's getFullStackTrace (see http://commons.apache.org/proper/commons-lang/javadocs/api-2.6/org/apache/commons/lang/exception/ExceptionUtils.html#getFullStackTrace%28java.lang.Throwable%29)

It saved my bacon. Thanks, Amar, for the hint!

9

With Java 8 Stream API you can do something like this:

Stream
    .of(throwable.getStackTrace())
    .map(StackTraceElement::toString)
    .collect(Collectors.joining("\n"));

It will take array of stack trace elements, convert them to string and join into multiline string.

1
  • 8
    This solution is removing message and is ignoring all parent trace
    – judovana
    Nov 7, 2019 at 13:54
8

Without java.io.* it can be done like this.

String trace = e.toString() + "\n";                     

for (StackTraceElement e1 : e.getStackTrace()) {
    trace += "\t at " + e1.toString() + "\n";
}   

And then the trace variable holds your stack trace. Output also holds the initial cause, the output is identical to printStackTrace()

Example, printStackTrace() yields:

java.io.FileNotFoundException: / (Is a directory)
    at java.io.FileOutputStream.open0(Native Method)
    at java.io.FileOutputStream.open(FileOutputStream.java:270)
    at java.io.FileOutputStream.<init>(FileOutputStream.java:213)
    at java.io.FileOutputStream.<init>(FileOutputStream.java:101)
    at Test.main(Test.java:9)

The trace String holds, when printed to stdout

java.io.FileNotFoundException: / (Is a directory)
     at java.io.FileOutputStream.open0(Native Method)
     at java.io.FileOutputStream.open(FileOutputStream.java:270)
     at java.io.FileOutputStream.<init>(FileOutputStream.java:213)
     at java.io.FileOutputStream.<init>(FileOutputStream.java:101)
     at Test.main(Test.java:9)
5

an exapansion on Gala's answer that will also include the causes for the exception:

private String extrapolateStackTrace(Exception ex) {
    Throwable e = ex;
    String trace = e.toString() + "\n";
    for (StackTraceElement e1 : e.getStackTrace()) {
        trace += "\t at " + e1.toString() + "\n";
    }
    while (e.getCause() != null) {
        e = e.getCause();
        trace += "Cause by: " + e.toString() + "\n";
        for (StackTraceElement e1 : e.getStackTrace()) {
            trace += "\t at " + e1.toString() + "\n";
        }
    }
    return trace;
}
5

Scala version

def stackTraceToString(e: Exception): String = {
  import java.io.{PrintWriter, StringWriter}
  val sw = new StringWriter()
  e.printStackTrace(new PrintWriter(sw))
  sw.toString
}
4

If you don't want to use an external library and you're not developing for Android, you could create an 'extension' method like this:

public static String getStackTraceString(Throwable e) {
    return getStackTraceString(e, "");
}

private static String getStackTraceString(Throwable e, String indent) {
    StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder();
    sb.append(e.toString());
    sb.append("\n");

    StackTraceElement[] stack = e.getStackTrace();
    if (stack != null) {
        for (StackTraceElement stackTraceElement : stack) {
            sb.append(indent);
            sb.append("\tat ");
            sb.append(stackTraceElement.toString());
            sb.append("\n");
        }
    }

    Throwable[] suppressedExceptions = e.getSuppressed();
    // Print suppressed exceptions indented one level deeper.
    if (suppressedExceptions != null) {
        for (Throwable throwable : suppressedExceptions) {
            sb.append(indent);
            sb.append("\tSuppressed: ");
            sb.append(getStackTraceString(throwable, indent + "\t"));
        }
    }

    Throwable cause = e.getCause();
    if (cause != null) {
        sb.append(indent);
        sb.append("Caused by: ");
        sb.append(getStackTraceString(cause, indent));
    }

    return sb.toString();
}
4

The solution is to convert the stackTrace of array to string data type. See the following example:

import java.util.Arrays;

try{

}catch(Exception ex){
    String stack = Arrays.toString(ex.getStackTrace());
    System.out.println("stack "+ stack);
}
0
3

My oneliner to convert stack trace to the enclosed multi-line string:

Stream.of(e.getStackTrace()).map((a) -> a.toString()).collect(Collectors.joining("\n", "[", "]"))

Easy to pass to the logger "as is".

2
  • You get something that differs from printStackTrace() Here you will loose: 1) Exception which was thrown; 2) Causes and their stacktrace
    – valijon
    Dec 11, 2018 at 10:51
  • The difference is quite expected, since converting of the printStackTrace() never was a part of the question. Dec 11, 2018 at 14:29
3

Few options

  1. StringWriter sw = new StringWriter(); e.printStackTrace(new PrintWriter(sw)); String exceptionAsString = sw.toString();

  2. Using Google Guava lib String stackTrace = Throwables.getStackTraceAsString ( myException ) ;

  3. org.apache.commons.lang.exception.ExceptionUtils.getStackTrace(Throwable)

3
 import java.io.PrintWriter;
import java.io.StringWriter;

public class PrintStackTrace {

    public static void main(String[] args) {

        try {
            int division = 0 / 0;
        } catch (ArithmeticException e) {
            StringWriter sw = new StringWriter();
            e.printStackTrace(new PrintWriter(sw));
            String exceptionAsString = sw.toString();
            System.out.println(exceptionAsString);
        }
    }
}

When you run the program, the output will be something similar:

java.lang.ArithmeticException: / by zero
at PrintStackTrace.main(PrintStackTrace.java:9)
3

I wonder why no one mentioned ExceptionUtils.getStackFrames(exception)

For me it's the most convenient way to dump stacktrace with all its causes to the end:

String.join("\n", ExceptionUtils.getStackFrames(exception));
2
  • 7
    and what is ExceptionUtils? Aug 11, 2020 at 12:37
  • 1
    It's a commons lang util class Aug 13, 2020 at 23:17
2

Warning: This may be a bit off topic, but oh well... ;)

I don't know what the original posters reason was for wanting the stack trace as string in the first place. When the stack trace should end up in an SLF4J/Logback LOG, but no exception was or should be thrown here's what I do:

public void remove(List<String> ids) {
    if(ids == null || ids.isEmpty()) {
        LOG.warn(
            "An empty list (or null) was passed to {}.remove(List). " +
            "Clearly, this call is unneccessary, the caller should " + 
            "avoid making it. A stacktrace follows.", 
            getClass().getName(),
            new Throwable ("Stacktrace")
        );

        return;
    }

    // actual work, remove stuff
}

I like it because it does not require an external library (other than your logging backend, which will be in place most of the time anyway, of course).

2

I wrote a few methods for this a while ago, so I figured why not throw my two cents at this.

/** @param stackTraceElements The elements to convert
 * @return The resulting string */
public static final String stackTraceElementsToStr(StackTraceElement[] stackTraceElements) {
    return stackTraceElementsToStr(stackTraceElements, "\n");
}

/** @param stackTraceElements The elements to convert
 * @param lineSeparator The line separator to use
 * @return The resulting string */
public static final String stackTraceElementsToStr(StackTraceElement[] stackTraceElements, String lineSeparator) {
    return stackTraceElementsToStr(stackTraceElements, lineSeparator, "");
}

/** @param stackTraceElements The elements to convert
 * @param lineSeparator The line separator to use
 * @param padding The string to be used at the start of each line
 * @return The resulting string */
public static final String stackTraceElementsToStr(StackTraceElement[] stackTraceElements, String lineSeparator, String padding) {
    String str = "";
    if(stackTraceElements != null) {
        for(StackTraceElement stackTrace : stackTraceElements) {
            str += padding + (!stackTrace.toString().startsWith("Caused By") ? "\tat " : "") + stackTrace.toString() + lineSeparator;
        }
    }
    return str;
}

/** @param stackTraceElements The elements to convert
 * @return The resulting string */
public static final String stackTraceCausedByElementsOnlyToStr(StackTraceElement[] stackTraceElements) {
    return stackTraceCausedByElementsOnlyToStr(stackTraceElements, "\n");
}

/** @param stackTraceElements The elements to convert
 * @param lineSeparator The line separator to use
 * @return The resulting string */
public static final String stackTraceCausedByElementsOnlyToStr(StackTraceElement[] stackTraceElements, String lineSeparator) {
    return stackTraceCausedByElementsOnlyToStr(stackTraceElements, lineSeparator, "");
}

/** @param stackTraceElements The elements to convert
 * @param lineSeparator The line separator to use
 * @param padding The string to be used at the start of each line
 * @return The resulting string */
public static final String stackTraceCausedByElementsOnlyToStr(StackTraceElement[] stackTraceElements, String lineSeparator, String padding) {
    String str = "";
    if(stackTraceElements != null) {
        for(StackTraceElement stackTrace : stackTraceElements) {
            str += (!stackTrace.toString().startsWith("Caused By") ? "" : padding + stackTrace.toString() + lineSeparator);
        }
    }
    return str;
}

/** @param e The {@link Throwable} to convert
 * @return The resulting String */
public static final String throwableToStrNoStackTraces(Throwable e) {
    return throwableToStrNoStackTraces(e, "\n");
}

/** @param e The {@link Throwable} to convert
 * @param lineSeparator The line separator to use
 * @return The resulting String */
public static final String throwableToStrNoStackTraces(Throwable e, String lineSeparator) {
    return throwableToStrNoStackTraces(e, lineSeparator, "");
}

/** @param e The {@link Throwable} to convert
 * @param lineSeparator The line separator to use
 * @param padding The string to be used at the start of each line
 * @return The resulting String */
public static final String throwableToStrNoStackTraces(Throwable e, String lineSeparator, String padding) {
    if(e == null) {
        return "null";
    }
    String str = e.getClass().getName() + ": ";
    if((e.getMessage() != null) && !e.getMessage().isEmpty()) {
        str += e.getMessage() + lineSeparator;
    } else {
        str += lineSeparator;
    }
    str += padding + stackTraceCausedByElementsOnlyToStr(e.getStackTrace(), lineSeparator, padding);
    for(Throwable suppressed : e.getSuppressed()) {
        str += padding + throwableToStrNoStackTraces(suppressed, lineSeparator, padding + "\t");
    }
    Throwable cause = e.getCause();
    while(cause != null) {
        str += padding + "Caused by:" + lineSeparator + throwableToStrNoStackTraces(e.getCause(), lineSeparator, padding);
        cause = cause.getCause();
    }
    return str;
}

/** @param e The {@link Throwable} to convert
 * @return The resulting String */
public static final String throwableToStr(Throwable e) {
    return throwableToStr(e, "\n");
}

/** @param e The {@link Throwable} to convert
 * @param lineSeparator The line separator to use
 * @return The resulting String */
public static final String throwableToStr(Throwable e, String lineSeparator) {
    return throwableToStr(e, lineSeparator, "");
}

/** @param e The {@link Throwable} to convert
 * @param lineSeparator The line separator to use
 * @param padding The string to be used at the start of each line
 * @return The resulting String */
public static final String throwableToStr(Throwable e, String lineSeparator, String padding) {
    if(e == null) {
        return "null";
    }
    String str = padding + e.getClass().getName() + ": ";
    if((e.getMessage() != null) && !e.getMessage().isEmpty()) {
        str += e.getMessage() + lineSeparator;
    } else {
        str += lineSeparator;
    }
    str += padding + stackTraceElementsToStr(e.getStackTrace(), lineSeparator, padding);
    for(Throwable suppressed : e.getSuppressed()) {
        str += padding + "Suppressed: " + throwableToStr(suppressed, lineSeparator, padding + "\t");
    }
    Throwable cause = e.getCause();
    while(cause != null) {
        str += padding + "Caused by:" + lineSeparator + throwableToStr(e.getCause(), lineSeparator, padding);
        cause = cause.getCause();
    }
    return str;
}

Example:

try(InputStream in = new FileInputStream(file)) {
    ...
} catch(IOException e) {
    String exceptionToString = throwableToStr(e);
    someLoggingUtility.println(exceptionToString);
    ...
}

Prints:

java.io.FileNotFoundException: C:\test.txt (The system cannot find the file specified)
    at java.io.FileInputStream.open0(Native Method)
    at java.io.FileInputStream.open(Unknown Source)
    at java.io.FileInputStream.<init>(Unknown Source)
    at com.gmail.br45entei.Example.main(Example.java:32)

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