I was wondering if there\'s a list with all Exception types. I know a few Exceptions, but I don\'t know them all. Sometimes I throw an Exception and then I think, maybe .NET
First of all you must understand what are exceptions and how to deal with it. There some resources, that can help you to understand this topic.
"Choosing the Right Type of Exception to Throw" by Krzysztof Cwalina. http://blogs.msdn.com/kcwalina/archive/2006/07/05/657268.aspx
"How to Design Exception Hierarchies" by Krzysztof Cwalina. http://blogs.msdn.com/kcwalina/archive/2007/01/30/ExceptionHierarchies.aspx
The Exception Mode by Chris Brumme. http://blogs.msdn.com/cbrumme/archive/2003/10/01/51524.aspx
May be helpful:
"Why catch(Exception)/empty catch is bad" by CLR Team Blog. http://blogs.msdn.com/b/dotnet/archive/2009/02/19/why-catch-exception-empty-catch-is-bad.aspx
"Write Robust Exception-Handling Code" by Bill Wagner. http://visualstudiomagazine.com/articles/2007/06/01/write-robust-exceptionhandling-code.aspx
"C#: Do we need checked exception in C#" https://blogs.msdn.com/abhinaba/archive/2005/12/16/504373.aspx
Also Jeffrey Richter in his book CLR via C# build exception hierarchy (p.430, Chapter 19) and lately he wrote a program that display all of the classes that are ultimately derived from System.Exception:
using System;
using System.Text;
using System.Reflection;
using System.Collections.Generic;
public static class Program
{
public static void Main()
{
// Explicitly load the assemblies that we want to reflect over
LoadAssemblies();
// Initialize our counters and our exception type list
Int32 totalPublicTypes = 0, totalExceptionTypes = 0;
List<String> exceptionTree = new List<String>();
// Iterate through all assemblies loaded in this AppDomain
foreach (Assembly a in AppDomain.CurrentDomain.GetAssemblies())
{
// Iterate through all types defined in this assembly
foreach (Type t in a.GetExportedTypes())
{
totalPublicTypes++;
// Ignore type if not a public class
if (!t.IsClass || !t.IsPublic) continue;
// Build a string of the type's derivation hierarchy
StringBuilder typeHierarchy = new StringBuilder(t.FullName, 5000);
// Assume that the type is not an Exception-derived type
Boolean derivedFromException = false;
// See if System.Exception is a base type of this type
Type baseType = t.BaseType;
while ((baseType != null) && !derivedFromException)
{
// Append the base type to the end of the string
typeHierarchy.Append("-" + baseType);
derivedFromException = (baseType == typeof(System.Exception));
baseType = baseType.BaseType;
}
// No more bases and not Exception-derived, try next type
if (!derivedFromException) continue;
// We found an Exception-derived type
totalExceptionTypes++;
// For this Exception-derived type,
// reverse the order of the types in the hierarchy
String[] h = typeHierarchy.ToString().Split('-');
Array.Reverse(h);
// Build a new string with the hierarchy in order
// from Exception -> Exception-derived type
// Add the string to the list of Exception types
exceptionTree.Add(String.Join("-", h, 1, h.Length - 1));
}
}
// Sort the Exception types together in order of their hierarchy
exceptionTree.Sort();
// Display the Exception tree
foreach (String s in exceptionTree)
{
// For this Exception type, split its base types apart
string[] x = s.Split('-');
// Indent based on the number of base types
// and then show the most-derived type
Console.WriteLine(new String(' ', 3 * x.Length) + x[x.Length - 1]);
}
// Show final status of the types considered
Console.WriteLine("\n---> of {0} types, {1} are " +
"derived from System.Exception.",
totalPublicTypes, totalExceptionTypes);
}
private static void LoadAssemblies()
{
String[] assemblies = {
"System, PublicKeyToken={0}",
"System.Data, PublicKeyToken={0}",
"System.Design, PublicKeyToken={1}",
"System.DirectoryServices, PublicKeyToken={1}",
"System.Drawing, PublicKeyToken={1}",
"System.Drawing.Design, PublicKeyToken={1}",
"System.Management, PublicKeyToken={1}",
"System.Messaging, PublicKeyToken={1}",
"System.Runtime.Remoting, PublicKeyToken={0}",
"System.Security, PublicKeyToken={1}",
"System.ServiceProcess, PublicKeyToken={1}",
"System.Web, PublicKeyToken={1}",
"System.Web.RegularExpressions, PublicKeyToken={1}",
"System.Web.Services, PublicKeyToken={1}",
"System.Windows.Forms, PublicKeyToken={0}",
"System.Xml, PublicKeyToken={0}",
};
String EcmaPublicKeyToken = "b77a5c561934e089";
String MSPublicKeyToken = "b03f5f7f11d50a3a";
// Get the version of the assembly containing System.Object
// We'll assume the same version for all the other assemblies
Version version =
typeof(System.Object).Assembly.GetName().Version;
// Explicitly load the assemblies that we want to reflect over
foreach (String a in assemblies)
{
String Assemblyldentity =
String.Format(a, EcmaPublicKeyToken, MSPublicKeyToken) +
", Culture=neutral, Version=" + version;
Assembly.Load(AssemblyIdentity);
}
}
}
FYI ,
If you are using Visual Studio 2008 , go to menu Debug/Exceptions , you can see all the Exceptions within the
With that settings , you can arrange what to do when one of the exception occurs
Check this out http://explodingcoder.com/cms/content/visual-studio-fail-how-not-debug-net-exception-handling
There is an Exception Hierarchy.
Also, MSDN has an inheritance hierarchy at the page for the Exception class. But that one's just a long list and doesn't provide much detail.
Generally, .NET seems to have pretty few general built-in exceptions.
The Visual Studio Code Analysis (ie FxCop) documentation lists some general guidance on throwing existing exceptions.
Do not raise reserved exception types
A good way to see all types that derive from System.Exception in the .NET framework is by using Reflector.
Note that Reflector allows you to dinamically add any .NET assembly meaning that it will search for System.Exception derived types in any custom set of assemblies you provide. The most common .NET framework assemblies are added by default.
You can find all the defined exceptions under the derived types of System.Exception in the MSDN page for System.Exception (find it under the Inheritance Hierarchy section).