An exception
is a problem that arises during the execution of a program. An exception can
occur for many different reasons, including the following:
·
A user has entered
invalid data.
·
A file that needs to
be opened cannot be found.
·
A network connection
has been lost in the middle of communications or the JVM has run out of memory.
Some of
these exceptions are caused by user error, others by programmer error, and
others by physical resources that have failed in some manner.
To
understand how exception handling works in Java, you need to understand the
three categories of exceptions:
·
Checked exceptions: A checked exception is an exception that is typically a
user error or a problem that cannot be foreseen by the programmer. For example,
if a file is to be opened, but the file cannot be found, an exception occurs.
These exceptions cannot simply be ignored at the time of compilation.
·
Runtime exceptions: A runtime exception is an exception that occurs that
probably could have been avoided by the programmer. As opposed to checked
exceptions, runtime exceptions are ignored at the time of compilation.
·
Errors: These are not exceptions at all, but problems that arise
beyond the control of the user or the programmer. Errors are typically ignored
in your code because you can rarely do anything about an error. For example, if
a stack overflow occurs, an error will arise. They are also ignored at the time
of compilation.
Exception Hierarchy:
All
exception classes are subtypes of the java.lang.Exception class. The exception
class is a subclass of the Throwable class. Other than the exception class
there is another subclass called Error which is derived from the Throwable
class.
Errors are
not normally trapped form the Java programs. These conditions normally happen
in case of severe failures, which are not handled by the java programs. Errors
are generated to indicate errors generated by the runtime environment. Example
: JVM is out of Memory. Normally programs cannot recover from errors.
The
Exception class has two main subclasses: IOException class and RuntimeException
Class.
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