yourThread.isAlive()
returns if the thread is alive and has not yet died.
Also yourThread.getState()
gives you the state of the thread.
'...if the thread has stopped for some reason, I need to perform actions based on that result...' so your thread stops for some reason with nothing abnormal happens and if it was an exception you could catch it in try-catch
block:
try{
}
catch(Exception e){
}
There might be an error or something else. Try to use this to catch it:
try {
// your tasks
} catch (Throwable e) {
// ...I need to perform actions based on that result...
}
An Error is a subclass of Throwable that indicates serious problems that a reasonable application should not try to catch. Most such errors are abnormal conditions. ...
An instance of ThreadDeath is thrown in the victim thread when the (deprecated) Thread.stop() method is invoked.
The top-level error handler does not print out a message if ThreadDeath is never caught.
The class ThreadDeath is specifically a subclass of Error rather than Exception, even though it is a "normal occurrence", because many applications catch all occurrences of Exception and then discard the exception.
Class ThreadDeath