The following are the methods and constructors in Throwable
that support
chained exceptions.
Throwable getCause() Throwable initCause(Throwable) Throwable(String, Throwable) Throwable(Throwable)
Throwable
argument to initCause
and the Throwable
constructors is the exception
that caused the current exception. getCause
returns the exception that caused the current exception,
and initCause
sets the current exception's cause.
The following example shows how to use a chained exception.
try { } catch (IOException e) { throw new SampleException("Other IOException", e); }
IOException
is caught, a new
SampleException
exception is created with the original
cause attached and the chain of exceptions is thrown up to the next
higher level exception handler.
getStackTrace
method on
the exception object.
catch (Exception cause) { StackTraceElement elements[] = cause.getStackTrace(); for (int i = 0, n = elements.length; i < n; i++) { System.err.println(elements[i].getFileName() + ":" + elements[i].getLineNumber() + ">> " + elements[i].getMethodName() + "()"); } }
catch
block. However, rather than manually parsing the stack trace
and sending the output to System.err()
, it sends the output
to a file using the logging facility in the
java.util.logging
package.
try { Handler handler = new FileHandler("OutFile.log"); Logger.getLogger("").addHandler(handler); } catch (IOException e) { Logger logger = Logger.getLogger("package.name"); StackTraceElement elements[] = e.getStackTrace(); for (int i = 0, n = elements.length; i < n; i++) { logger.log(Level.WARNING, elements[i].getMethodName()); } }