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Trail: Essential Java Classes
Lesson: Handling Errors with Exceptions

Specifying the Exceptions Thrown by a Method

[PENDING: this leaves the file descriptor open. Need a new example to show this.]

The previous section showed you how to write an exception handler for the writeList method in the ListOfNumbers class. Sometimes, it's appropriate for your code to catch exceptions that can occur within it. In other cases, however, it's better to let a method further up the call stack handle the exception. For example, if you were providing the ListOfNumbers class as part of a package of classes, you probably couldn't anticipate the needs of all of the users of your package. In this case, it's better to not catch the exception and to allow someone further up the call stack to handle it.

If the writeList method doesn't catch the exceptions that can occur within it, then the writeList method must specify that it can throw them. Let's modify the writeList method to specify the exceptions that it can throw. To remind you, here's the original version of the writeList method:

public void writeList() {
    PrintWriter out = new PrintWriter(
                          new FileWriter("OutFile.txt"));

    for (int i = 0; i < size; i++)
        out.println("Value at: " + i + " = " + victor.elementAt(i));
}
As you recall, the new FileWriter("OutFile.txt") statement might throw an IOException (which is not a runtime exception). The victor.elementAt(i) statement can throw an ArrayIndexOutofBoundsException (which, as a subclass of RuntimeException, is a runtime exception).

To specify that writeList throws these two exceptions, you add a throws clause to the method signature for the writeList method. The throws clause is composed of the throws keyword followed by a comma-separated list of all the exceptions thrown by that method. The throws clause goes after the method name and argument list and before the curly bracket that defines the scope of the method. Here's an example:

public void writeList() throws IOException,
                             ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException {
Remember that ArrayIndexOutofBoundsException is a runtime exception, so you don't have to specify it in the throws clause, although you can.

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