In a Java 7 multicatch block such as the following:
try {
// code that throws exception
} catch (CharacterCodingException | UnknownServiceException ex) {
Yes, the type of ex
is the most specific supertype of both CharacterCodingException
and UnknownServiceException
, which would be IOException
.
Edit: Straight from the horse's mouth on http://cr.openjdk.java.net/~darcy/ProjectCoin/ProjectCoin-Documentation-v0.83.html#multi_catch:
Informally, the lub (least upper bound) is the most specific supertype of the types in question.
In JSL 7 http://docs.oracle.com/javase/specs/jls/se7/html/jls-14.html#jls-14.20-510
§14.20 > The declared type of an exception parameter that denotes its type as a union with alternatives D1 | D2 | ... | Dn is lub(D1, D2, ..., Dn) (§15.12.2.7).
The definition of lub()
i.e. the least upper bound is quite convoluted. Fortunately types we are talking about here are usually simply non generic subclasses of Throwable, and lub()
yields the most specific super class.
For a more complicated case, consider
class E1 extends Exception implements G<A>
class E2 extends Error implements G<B>
lub(E1, E2) = Throwable & G<?>