dynamic exception specification
Lists the exceptions that a function might directly or indirectly throw.
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[edit] Syntax
throw( typeid, typeid, ...)
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(deprecated) | ||||||||
This specification may appear only on lambda-declarator or on a function declarator that is the top-level (until C++17) declarator of a function, variable, or non-static data member, whose type is a function type, a pointer to function type, a reference to function type, a pointer to member function type. It may appear on the declarator of a parameter or on the declarator of a return type.
void f() throw(int); // OK: function declaration void (*fp)() throw (int); // OK: pointer to function declaration void g(void pfa() throw(int)); // OK: pointer to function parameter declaration typedef int (*pf)() throw(int); // Error: typedef declaration
[edit] Explanation
If a function is declared with type T
listed in its exception specification, the function may throw exceptions of that type or a type derived from it.
Incomplete types, pointers or references to incomplete types other than cv void*
, and rvalue reference types are not allowed in the exception specification. Array and function types, if used, are adjusted to corresponding pointer types. parameter packs are allowed (since C++11).
If the function throws an exception of the type not listed in its exception specification, the function std::unexpected is called. The default function calls std::terminate, but it may be replaced by a user-provided function (via std::set_unexpected) which may call std::terminate or throw an exception. If the exception thrown from std::unexpected is accepted by the exception specification, stack unwinding continues as usual. If it isn't, but std::bad_exception is allowed by the exception specification, std::bad_exception is thrown. Otherwise, std::terminate is called.
Potential exceptionsEach function
2) Otherwise, if the declaration of
f , fp , or mfp uses a dynamic exception specification(deprecated), the set consists of the types listed in that specification
3) Otherwise, the set consists of the placeholder "any"
Note: for implicitly-declared special member functions (constructors, assignment operators, and destructors) and for the inheriting constructors, the set of potential exceptions is a combination of the sets of the potential exceptions of everything they would call: constructors/assignment operators/destructors of non-variant non-static data members, direct bases, and, where appropriate, virtual bases (including default argument expressions, as always) Each expression
2) Otherwise, the set is the union of the sets of potential exceptions of all immediate subexpressions of
e (including default argument expressions), combined with another set that depends on the form of e , as follows:
1) If
e is a function call expression, and
2) If
e calls a function implicitly (it's an operator expression and the operator is overloaded, it is a new-expression and the allocation function is overloaded, or it is a full expression and the destructor of a temporary is called)), then the set is the set of that function.
3) If
e is a throw-expression, the set is the exception that would be initialized by its operand, or "any" for the re-throwing throw-expression (with no operand)void f() throw(int); // f()'s set is "int" void g(); // g()'s set is "any" struct A { A(); }; // "new A"'s set is "any" struct B { B() noexcept; }; // "B()"'s set is empty struct D() { D() throw (double); }; // new D's set is "double, any" All implicitly-declared member functions (and inheriting constructors) have exception specifications, selected as follows:
struct A { A(int = (A(5), 0)) noexcept; A(const A&) throw(); A(A&&) throw(); ~A() throw(X); }; struct B { B() throw(); B(const B&) = default; // exception specification is "noexcept(true)" B(B&&, int = (throw Y(), 0)) throw(Y) noexcept; ~B() throw(Y); }; int n = 7; struct D : public A, public B { int * p = new (std::nothrow) int[n]; // D has the following implicitly-declared members: // D::D() throw(X, std::bad_array_new_length); // D::D(const D&) noexcept(true); // D::D(D&&) throw(Y); // D::~D() throw(X, Y); }; |
(since C++17) |
[edit] Example
#include <iostream> #include <exception> #include <cstdlib> class X {}; class Y {}; class Z : public X {}; class W {}; void f() throw(X, Y) { int n = 0; if (n) throw X(); // OK if (n) throw Z(); // also OK throw W(); // will call std::unexpected() } int main() { std::set_unexpected([]{ std::cout << "That was unexpected" << std::endl; std::abort(); }); f(); }
Output:
That was unexpected