What is the best practice for handling exceptions without having to put try/catch blocks everywhere?
I had the idea of creating a class that is devoted to receiving and handling exceptions, but I am wondering if its a good design idea. Such a class would receive an exception and then decide what to do with it depending on its type or error code, could even parse the stack trace for specific information, etc.
Here is the basic idea behind and implementation:
public class ExceptionHandler
{
public static void Handle(Exception e)
{
if (e.GetBaseException().GetType() == typeof(ArgumentException))
{
Console.WriteLine("You caught an ArgumentException.");
}
else
{
Console.WriteLine("You did not catch an exception.");
throw e; // re-throwing is the default behavior
}
}
}
public static class ExceptionThrower
{
public static void TriggerException(bool isTrigger)
{
if (isTrigger)
throw new ArgumentException("You threw an exception.");
else
Console.WriteLine("You did not throw an exception.");
}
}
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
try
{
ExceptionThrower.TriggerException(true);
}
catch(Exception e)
{
ExceptionHandler.Handle(e);
}
Console.ReadLine();
}
}
I thought this would be an interesting endeavor because you would theoretically only need one or very few try / catch blocks around your main() method calls, and let the exception class handle everything else including re-throwing, handling, logging, whatever.
Thoughts?
ExceptionHandler
class, you will lose the previous stack-trace.throw e;
withthrow;
ExceptionHandler
, you could return abool
for whether theException
was handled or not. If not, "throw;
" from the original code. However, I'm not sure this is a good design in general.