Example code:
switch(something)
{
case 0:
System.Environment.Exit(0);
case 1:
// blah ...
break;
}
It won't compile because the compiler thinks that execution can return from Exit(). The compiler is obviously wrong.
No tricks. System.Environment.Exit()
is the real one.
Not only is it utterly illogical for System.Environment.Exit()
to return, I traced the code and it eventually calls ExitProcess(exitCode);
which can't return.
[System.Runtime.InteropServices.Out]
. It's not quite so special purpose; any method guaranteed to throw could be tagged with this; also note that C and C++ have it. If calling a runtime library that's missing it the code wouldn't even load so that's a small problem.