11

I'm bored with surrounding code with try catch like this..

try
{
    //some boring stuff
}
catch(Exception ex)
{
    //something even more boring stuff
}

I would like something like

SurroundWithTryCatch(MyMethod)

I know I can accomplish this behaviour by creating a delegate with the exact signature of the function, but creating a delegate for all the methods in my application it's just not an option.

I can also do this by injecting IL code but this is expensive in terms of performance as it creates an wrapper assembly around mine.

Any other valid ideeas?

7 Answers 7

24

Firstly, it sounds like you may be using try/catch too often - particularly if you're catching Exception. try/catch blocks should be relatively rare; unless you can really "handle" the exception, you should just let it bubble up to the next layer of the stack.

Now, assuming you really do want all of these try/catch blocks, why is it not an option to create a delegate? With anonymous methods and lambda expressions, as well as the Func/Action delegates in the System namespace, there's basically very little work to do. You write:

public void SurroundWithTryCatch(Action action)
{
    try
    {
        action();
    }
    catch(Exception ex)
    {
        //something even more boring stuff
    }    
}

and then your SurroundWithTryCatch(MyMethod) will work fine, if it takes no paramaters.

Alternatively, if you don't want to call a different method, just write:

public void MyMethod()
{
    SurroundWithTryCatch(() => 
    {
        // Logic here
    });
}

If you need to return from the method, you can do:

public int MyMethod()
{
    return SurroundWithTryCatch(() => 
    {
        // Logic here
        return 5;
    });
}

with a generic overload of SurroundWithTryCatch like this:

public T SurroundWithTryCatch<T>(Func<T> func)
{    
    try
    {
        return func();
    }
    catch(Exception ex)
    {
        //something even more boring stuff
    }    
}

Most of this would be fine in C# 2 as well, but type inference won't help you quite as much and you'll have to use anonymous methods instead of lambda expressions.

To go back to the start though: try to use try/catch less often. (try/finally should be much more frequent, although usually written as a using statement.)

1
  • @Jon ahh you beat me to it..DAM YOU ;)
    – Nathan W
    Nov 11, 2008 at 6:40
4

Aspect Oriented Programming could also help you, but this may require that you add libraries to your project, postsharp would help you in this case. See this link http://doc.postsharp.org/1.0/index.html#http://doc.postsharp.org/1.0/UserGuide/Laos/AspectKinds/OnExceptionAspect.html#idHelpTOCNode650988000

2
  • hey, that's exactly what I wanted, do you have any experience with this? Would you recommend using it instead of the classic way? Nov 11, 2008 at 8:16
  • I have used this only for learning purpuses, not on a real project. I personally like this concept very much. Nov 11, 2008 at 9:25
3

You can try to use some null validiation instead. I can take a LINQ to SQL example:

var user = db.Users.SingleOrDefault(u => u.Username == 3);

if (user == null)
    throw new ArgumentNullException("User", "User cannot be null.");

// "else" continue your code...
2
  • Actually you should never throw NullReferenceException. This is reserved for the runtime. You could try though ArgumentNullException Nov 11, 2008 at 7:43
  • Sorry. I wrote that in a hurry. I will change it right away. Thanx :)
    – stiduck
    Nov 11, 2008 at 9:14
2

Perhaps you're treating exception handling as error codes via a different syntax? So don't try/catch. Let the exception propagate upwards.

2

For me I looks like you are asking for aspect oriented programming. I think you should take a look at PostSharp.

1
  • thanks, I think that's what I wanted, have you used this approach in a production code? Nov 11, 2008 at 8:17
0

I'm not sure for C#, but in Java-land you could define and interface with all the methods, and then hide it under a proxy object. You could run away with writing even more code by defining something like:

ExceptionCatcher.catchAll(new Runnable() {
  public void run() {
     //run delegate here
     MyMethod();
  }
});

and catchAll() will just call the runnable and wrapping a try-catch block around it.

However, I think what you really want is a language that has got nice closure support. Using closures, doing what you want is extremely easy.

1
  • Fortunately, C# is a language with nice closure support :) (The question doesn't state language, but it can be inferred by the code and mentioning IL and delegates.)
    – Jon Skeet
    Nov 11, 2008 at 8:12
0

If you're using Java, you have RuntimeExceptions, which are exceptions that mean something has gone wrong that you can't be expected to recover from. Look it up. Start here: http://java.sun.com/docs/books/tutorial/essential/exceptions/runtime.html

For example, Spring's Data Access bits throw various RuntimeExceptions when things go wrong. Dealing with them is optional.

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