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A lot of times, it is mentioned to only catch exceptions which I can handle (throw, wrap and/or log, or perform some other actions).

Which exceptions cannot be handled? Is this the same meaning as should not be caught? I know that exceptions which may represent an object reference being null should not be caught, because they are programming errors and not user-provoked. Is there any other example? Another one is ExecutionEngineException.

Also, is the course of action in a catch block always just between rethrow, wrap/rethrow and log? Is there ever a case where some other action needs to be performed in a catch block?

Thanks

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4  
I don't really understand this question. You know which exceptions you can handle. It's the ones you've specifically written code in the exception handler to handle. It's the ones that you can fix. If you're not sure, you can't handle them, so you shouldn't catch them. – Cody Gray Apr 1 '11 at 0:15
Responses to this question may also be helpful: stackoverflow.com/q/7152354/625332 – Dmitry Aug 22 '11 at 21:10

3 Answers

up vote 10 down vote accepted

The usual advice applies, only catch what you can handle. There's a utility function named IsCriticalException inside the framework that's pretty commonly used by parts of the framework code to decide whether or not to swallow an exception. Might as well go by that. It considers the following critical:

  • NullReferenceException
  • StackOverflowException (uncatchable)
  • OutOfMemoryException
  • ThreadAbortException
  • ExecutionEngineException (uncatchable in 4.0)
  • IndexOutOfRangeException
  • AccessViolationException

It is a good list.

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Most properly written applications would not need to know this list because they will treat all unhandled application the same: they will just let CLR terminate the process. They will not swallow everything but a list_of_exceptions_that_is_considered_to_be_critical_by_Microsoft.VisualStudio.S‌​hell.10.0. It is interesting to know that such method exists thought. – Dmitry Aug 22 '11 at 20:44

I would use Eric Lippert's advice and not catch "Fatal" exceptions:

http://blogs.msdn.com/b/ericlippert/archive/2008/09/10/vexing-exceptions.aspx

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here is the exception hierarchy for C# msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/z4c5tckx(v=vs.80).aspx – m4tt1mus Apr 1 '11 at 0:10
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Eric also suggests not catching "Boneheaded" exceptions, since doing so is hiding bugs in your code. – Brian Apr 1 '11 at 16:48
The correct link is Exception Hierarchy – John Saunders Mar 2 '12 at 1:58

The course of action in a catch block may not always be rethrow, wrap/retrow and log. I've seen where a db exception, like a deadlock, causes an exception to be thrown and then the catch logic attempts to perform the database action again in hope that the locked resource is no longer locked.

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