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Today I was working in C# and tried to catch a FileNotFoundException. But I wasn't able to do so until I added using System.IO.

Why was FileNotFoundException included in the System.IO namespace and not in the System namespace?

I understand that FileNotFoundException will be caused by an IO only, hence maybe the reason. But on the other hand, shouldn't all Exceptions be in the System namespace?

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    Exceptions in Java are kept in different namespaces too.
    – zneak
    Aug 2, 2012 at 15:09
  • @zneak I think they are all under java.lang.Exception. Aug 2, 2012 at 15:10
  • FileNotFoundException is derived from Exception but is in the System.IO dll & Namespace Here Aug 2, 2012 at 15:10
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    @KazekageGaara java.lang.Exception is a class, not a namespace. Java exceptions inherit from java.lang.Exception but are kept in different namespaces (for example, FileNotFoundException is in the java.io namespace). In C#, the same principle applies - all exceptions inherit from System.Exception, and live in different namespaces - such as FileNotFoundException being in System.IO. Both languages are essentially the same in this respect.
    – Chris
    Aug 2, 2012 at 15:16

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Code that belongs together should be kept together. This is one of the key aspects of modular programming, which OOP belongs to.

The code in System.IO is the code likely to throw a FileNotFoundException, not any other code.

In the same way that SqlException is in the System.Data.SqlClient namespace.

It makes no sense to put all types of exceptions together, in particular for exception types that are very specific to certain usages (like database access).

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I understand that FileNotFoundException will be caused by an IO only, hence maybe the reason. But on the other hand, shouldn't all Exceptions be kept under Exception?

Below is heirarchy showing where is FileNotFoundException located. So to answer your question it is a child (rather say Grand-Grand Child) of the Exception class

System.Object 
  System.Exception
    System.SystemException
      System.IO.IOException
        System.IO.FileNotFoundException
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FileNotFoundException is a class that is derived from Exception (or, more accurately, derived from a chain of classes that eventually derive from Exception). You can't really put FileNotFoundException "under" Exception unless maybe you're talking about making it an inner class. But that would require putting it in the same assembly as Exception, which doesn't scale at all. When the team working on System.SomeNewFeature.dll wanted to create an exception, they couldn't put it into mscorlib.dll with Exception - it had to go in their code.

Beyond the necessity of doing that, it is possible for them to just shove it in whatever namespace they want. But it just makes sense from a grouping/organization standpoint. You only have (quick) access to the Exceptions that are relevant to what you're working on. If they were all in System then it'd be crazy complicated.

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Think about it like this: You create your own CustomClass in its very own CustomNamespace. Wouldn't it make sense that your CustomException be defined within CustomNamespace since that is where its context is understood?

Also, imagine if every single exception type is defined in one place. A complete mess!

We use namespaces to give us context AND to logically organise our types.

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Generally you want to keep your exception in the scope they handle (keep your code grouped). If you think about it, putting FileNotFoundException makes sens to be in System.IO as that handles file system interaction. Even if the exception is not in the System.Exception namespace it still inherits form System.Exception. It's very unlikely that some other code will throw the FileNotFoundException. Just like it's unlikely that something interacting with the file system will throw a System.Net.WebException

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