??? 09/27/05 07:30 Read: times |
#101595 - when to try ... catch Responding to: ???'s previous message |
A try .. catch is the modern acceptable way of breaking out of the expected flow control, and it's not surprising that compiles code it as a jump.
I think that the important bit is that the expected flow is what the function promises to do, so a function called char getCharFromBuf() promises to return a char. The only permissible reason for breaking the promise is an exception which makes it impossible to fulfil. |
Topic | Author | Date |
RET to a different address | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
here is how pseudocode | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
RET to a different address | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
no flaw, but 1.000.000 gotchas | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
That's what I wanted to know | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
Yes | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
"clever" | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
OT: my wife | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
no flaw, but seriously not recommended | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
experience | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
reload SP | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
restoring stack | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
Recognisable string![]() | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
named return value | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
Bad Practice | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
Well phrased | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
What I am doing with it | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
try...catch | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
setjmp / longjmp | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
when to try ... catch | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
the borderline | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
Promises | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
who cares if an exceptiom is "acceptable | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
Parsing input data | 01/01/70 00:00 |