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Chapter 12: Handling Exceptions and Events Java Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design, Second Edition Objectives Learn what an exception is. See how a try/catch block is used to handle exceptions. Become aware of the hierarchy of exception classes. Learn about checked and unchecked exceptions. Learn how to handle exceptions within a program. Discover how to throw and rethrow an exception. Learn how to handle events in a program. Java Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design, Second Edition 2 Exception An occurrence of an undesirable situation that can be detected during program execution. Examples: Division by zero. Trying to open an input file that does not exist. An array index that goes out of bounds. Java Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design, Second Edition 3 Handling Exceptions within a Program Can use an if statement to handle an exception. However, suppose that division by zero occurs in more than one place within the same block. In this case, using if statements may not be the most effective way to handle the exception. Java Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design, Second Edition 4 Java’s Mechanism of Exception Handling When an exception occurs, an object of a particular exception class is created. Java provides a number of exception classes to effectively handle certain common exceptions, such as: Division by zero Invalid input File not found Java Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design, Second Edition 5 Java’s Mechanism of Exception Handling Division by zero is: An arithmetic error. Handled by the class ArithmeticException. When a division by zero exception occurs, the program creates an object of the class ArithmeticException. Java Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design, Second Edition 6 Java’s Mechanism of Exception Handling When a Scanner object is used to input data into a program, any invalid input errors are handled using the class InputMismatchException. The class Exception (directly or indirectly) is the superclass of all the exception classes in Java. Java Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design, Second Edition 7 try/catch/finally Block Statements that might generate an exception are placed in a try block. The try block: Might also contain statements that should not be executed if an exception occurs. Is followed by zero or more catch blocks. A catch block: Specifies the type of exception it can catch. Contains an exception handler. Java Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design, Second Edition 8 try/catch/finally Block The last catch block may or may not be followed by a finally block. Any code contained in a finally block always executes regardless of whether an exception occurs, except when the program exits early from a try block by calling the method System.exit. If a try block has no catch block, then it must have the finally block. Java Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design, Second Edition 9 try/catch/finally Block Java Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design, Second Edition 10 try/catch/finally Block If no exception is thrown in a try block, all catch blocks associated with the try block are ignored and program execution resumes after the last catch block. If an exception is thrown in a try block, the remaining statements in the try block are ignored. The program searches the catch blocks in the order in which they appear after the try block and looks for an appropriate exception handler. Java Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design, Second Edition 11 try/catch/finally Block If the type of the thrown exception matches the parameter type in one of the catch blocks, the code of that catch block executes and the remaining catch blocks are ignored. If there is a finally block after the last catch block, the finally block executes regardless of whether an exception occurs. Java Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design, Second Edition 12 Order of catch Blocks The heading of a catch block specifies the type of exception it handles. A catch block can catch either all exceptions of a specific type or all types of exceptions. A reference variable of a superclass type can point to an object of its subclass. Java Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design, Second Edition 13 Order of catch Blocks If you declare an exception using the class Exception in the heading of a catch block, then that catch block can catch all types of exceptions because the class Exception is the superclass of all exception classes. In a sequence of catch blocks following a try block, a catch block that declares an exception of a subclass type should be placed before catch blocks that declare exceptions of a superclass type. Java Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design, Second Edition 14 Order of catch Blocks Java Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design, Second Edition 15 Order of catch Blocks Java Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design, Second Edition 16 Order of catch Blocks Java Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design, Second Edition 17 Order of catch Blocks Java Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design, Second Edition 18 Order of catch Blocks Java Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design, Second Edition 19 Java’s Exception Class class Exception: Subclass of class Throwable. Superclass of classes designed to handle exceptions. Various types of exceptions: I/O exceptions. Number format exceptions. File not found exceptions. Array index out of bounds exceptions. Various exceptions categorized into separate classes and contained in various packages. Java Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design, Second Edition 20 Java’s Exception Class Java Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design, Second Edition 21 Java’s Exception Class Java Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design, Second Edition 22 Java’s Exception Class Java Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design, Second Edition 23 Java’s Exception Class Java Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design, Second Edition 24 Java’s Exception Class Java Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design, Second Edition 25 Java’s Exception Class Java Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design, Second Edition 26 Checked Exceptions Any exception that can be analyzed by the compiler. Example: FileNotFoundExceptions. Java Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design, Second Edition 27 Unchecked Exceptions Exceptions that cannot be analyzed when the program compiles (must be checked for by programmer). Examples: Division by zero Array index out of bounds Syntax: throws ExceptionType1, ExceptionType2,... ExceptionType1, ExceptionType2, and so on are names of exception classes Java Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design, Second Edition 28 Exceptions Example Code public static void exceptionMethod() throws InputMismatchException, FileNotFoundException { //statements } The method exceptionMethod throws exceptions of the type InputMismatchException and FileNotFoundException. Java Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design, Second Edition 29 The class Exception and the Operator instanceof A reference of a superclass type can point to objects of its subclass. You can determine if a reference variable points to an object using the operator instanceof. You can combine catch blocks using this facility. Java Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design, Second Edition 30 try { The class Exception and the Operator instanceof System.out.print("Line 4: Enter the " + "dividend: "); dividend = console.nextInt(); System.out.println(); System.out.print("Line 7: Enter the " + "divisor: "); divisor = console.nextInt(); System.out.println(); quotient = dividend / divisor; System.out.println("Line 11: Quotient = " + quotient); } catch (Exception eRef) { if (eRef instanceof ArithmeticException) System.out.println("Line 14: Exception " + eRef.toString()); else if (eRef instanceof InputMismatchException) System.out.println("Line 16: Exception " + eRef.toString()); } Java Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design, Second Edition 31 Rethrowing and Throwing an Exception When an exception occurs in a try block, control immediately passes to one of the catch blocks. Typically, a catch block does one of the following: Completely handles the exception. Partially processes the exception. In this case, the catch block either rethrows the same exception or throws another exception for the calling environment to handle the exception. Rethrows the same exception for the calling environment to handle the exception. Java Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design, Second Edition 32 Rethrowing and Throwing an Exception Useful when: Catch block catches exception but is unable to handle it. Catch block decides exception should be handled by calling environment. Allows programmer to provide exception handling code in one place. Syntax: throw exceptionReference; Java Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design, Second Edition 33 Rethrowing and Throwing an Exception import java.util.*; public class RethrowExceptionExmp1 { static Scanner console = new Scanner(System.in); public static void main(String[] args) { int number; try { number = getNumber(); System.out.println("Line 5: number = " + number); } catch (InputMismatchException imeRef) { System.out.println("Line 7: Exception " + imeRef.toString()); } } } Java Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design, Second Edition 34 Rethrowing and Throwing an Exception public static int getNumber() throws InputMismatchException { int num; try { System.out.print("Line 11: Enter an “ + "integer: "); num = console.nextInt(); System.out.println(); return num; } catch (InputMismatchException imeRef) { throw imeRef; } } } Java Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design, Second Edition 35 The Method printStackTrace Used to determine the order in which the methods were called and where the exception was handled. Java Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design, Second Edition 36 The Method printStackTrace import java.io.*; public class PrintStackTraceExample1 { public static void main(String[] args) { try { methodA(); } catch (Exception e) { System.out.println(e.toString() + " caught in main"); e.printStackTrace(); } } Java Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design, Second Edition 37 The Method printStackTrace public static void methodA() throws Exception { methodB(); } public static void methodB() throws Exception { methodC(); } public static void methodC() throws Exception { throw new Exception("Exception generated " + "in method C"); } } Java Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design, Second Edition 38 The Method printStackTrace Sample Run: java.lang.Exception: Exception generated in method C caught in main java.lang.Exception: Exception generated in method C at PrintStackTraceExample1.methodC (PrintStackTraceExample1.java:31) at PrintStackTraceExample1.methodB (PrintStackTraceExample1.java:26) at PrintStackTraceExample1.methodA (PrintStackTraceExample1.java:22) at PrintStackTraceExample1.main (PrintStackTraceExample1.java:11) Java Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design, Second Edition 39 Exception-Handling Techniques Terminate program. Output appropriate error message upon termination. Fix error and continue. Repeatedly get user input. Output appropriate error message until valid value is entered. Log error and continue. Write error messages to file and continue with program execution. Java Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design, Second Edition 40 Creating Your Own Exception Classes Exception class you define extends class Exception or one of its subclasses. Syntax to throw your own exception object: throw new ExceptionClassName(messageString); Java Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design, Second Edition 41 Creating Your Own Exception Classes public class MyDivisionByZeroException extends Exception { public MyDivisionByZeroException() { super("Cannot divide by zero"); } public MyDivisionByZeroException(String strMessage) { super(strMessage); } } Java Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design, Second Edition 42 Event Handling Action events: Handled by implementing interface ActionListener. Window events: Handled by implementing interface WindowListener. Mouse events: Handled by implementing interface MouseListener. Key events: Handled by implementing interface KeyListener. Java Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design, Second Edition 43 Event Handling class WindowAdapter: Implements interface WindowListener with empty bodies to methods. class MouseAdapter: Implements interface MouseListener with empty bodies to methods. Java Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design, Second Edition 44 Registering Listeners To register window listener object to GUI component: Use method addWindowListener. Window listener object being registered is passed as parameter to method addWindowListener. To register mouse listener object to GUI component: Use method addMouseListener. Mouse listener object being registered is passed as parameter to method addMouseListener. Java Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design, Second Edition 45 Registering Listeners Java Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design, Second Edition 46 Registering Listeners Java Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design, Second Edition 47 Registering Listeners Java Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design, Second Edition 48 Programming Example: Calculator Java Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design, Second Edition 49 Chapter Summary Exception definition Handling exceptions within a program: try/catch/finally block. Order of catch blocks. Using try/catch blocks in a program. The class Exception and the Operator instanceof. Rethrowing and throwing an exception. Java Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design, Second Edition 50 Chapter Summary Exception Hierarchy Classes Checked and unchecked exceptions The method printStackTrace Exception handling techniques: Terminate program. Fix error and continue. Log error and continue. Creating your own exception classes Event handling Java Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design, Second Edition 51