blogs.msdn.com/b/davidklinems/archive/2005/07/12/438061.aspx " the debugger gets notified whenever an exception is encountered At this point, the application is suspended and the debugger decides how to handle the exception. The first pass through this mechanism is called a "first chance" exception. Depending on the debugger's configuration, it will either resume the application and pass the exception on or it will leave the application suspended and enter debug mode."
right, can't throw if there's an uncaught. You'll have to store it later until the exception is caught. I can't think of a way to "stop" the catch and throw something else.
@Abyx no. In MSVC10 I get a warning for catch(...) that says it does not catch SEH exceptions, unless I turn on a special compiler option. I think SEH exceptions were C++ exceptions in MSVC9 though.
@Abyx oh: "SEH and C++ exceptions are orthogonal.". You're right, they are not orthogonal.
The whole RAII-destructor-exception/exception stack thing could be done away with entirely if C++ simiply said "destructors are nothrow". I can't think of a legitimate use for throwing exceptions from destructors.
@Xeo if you have resources on that machine, and the destructor exits, there is no way to know which resources were just leaked. No logging, no debugging, no contact-them-later, nothing. Seems like a violation of RAII.
Most people say never throw an exception out of a destructor - doing so results in undefined behavior. Stroustrup makes the point that "the vector destructor explicitly invokes the destructor for every element. This implies that if an element destructor throws, the vector destruction fails... The...
@Xeo catch (std::RAII_dest_error& next) {next.retry(); if (exceptionstack.size()) throw exceptionstack.top();} <-- and it throws into itself. But that doesn't work in C++.
I think I invented it. I wouldn't be completely surprised if I used it in an answer of mine. But I don't recall using it outside one of my employers codebases :)
I think the RAII_destructor_error/exception_stack concepts can only work if RAII_destructor_error is an abstract class. Actually, it also provides the option to move the resource deallocation to any arbitrary point after a failure.
@Xeo so the proper way to handle any exception is to catch(/*stuff*/) { /*handle*/; while(exceptionstack.size()) {try {exceptionstack.top().tryagain(); } catch(...) { /*????*/} exceptionstack.pop();} }?
@Xeo there could be an exception handling thread which occasionally calls bool tryagain() on each RAII_dtor_exception every 30 seconds and remove those that succeed...
Last time I used ImageMagick I found the documentation to be rather lacking. It took a lot of trial an error to get something going, and when you go through trial and error like that you never feel certain that what you have is concrete
For example:
This question: What are some funny loading statements to keep users amused?
used to have this notice on top:
But since then it has been deleted on November 9th.
I have seen this with a few of the historically significant questions like What is the best comment in source code you ...
@wilhelmtell no, because if the temporary is optimized away, you have one less constructor, and one less destructor. There's still a 1-1 everywhere, on each object.
no. if the temporary can be optimized away then it can also not be optimized away. optimize it away in the ctor, keep it in the dtor. so, can the temp be optimized away?
@MooingDuck but supposed i had a function that returns a transaction by value. then there are at least two copies being made. RVO an jump in and change the observed behaviour. i'm asking if other optimizeations can do that too. it feels shaky.
@JohannesSchaublitb Why do you waste so much time on useless template wankery? Can't you focus your energy on quantum computing (or whatever the next big thing is) instead? ;)
@Xeo it dawns on me that the RAII_dtor_error/exception_stack is effectively a delayed/retriable finalizer. Java has delayed finalizers but I don't think they're retryable.
no we are the exceptions thrown from the universes destructor. Now, we are still to decide whether God or Satan implement longjmp in the universe just to keep us around longer