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06:05
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Q: Java: error cannot find symbol - why is this an error and not an exception?

Malcolm WrightI'm relatively new to Java, and trying to understand the rationale behind making this an error, rather than an exception. I've read in several places that an error: "indicates serious problems that a reasonable application should not try to catch" In my case, I've made a method called getA...

It's fine to throw a specific exception, for example IllegalArgumentException, which shows that the method was passed something it is not expected to handle. Throwing Exception is essentially useless to know anything other than "something" went wrong: it's somewhat akin to returning new Object().
Post a reproducible example, not a sample of the code.
When you state "an inexistent field is requested" are you meaning an invalid String value or undefined?
user6073886
"Cannot find symbol" is a compile time error. Those have nothing to do with Exceptions and what your compiler is basicly telling you is that the code you want him to compile is invalid and cannot even be translated to a runnable program.
Maybe the oppotunity of reflection could be a way to achive it.
06:05
If you have an know number of attributes/fields you want to access it would be beeter to have a getter for each one. And if your class wants to be able to add attributes at runtime you should use a Map<String, R> to handle the values for the attributes rather as an switch
@ElliottFrisch - thank you for the advice. A reproducible example would be boring here: String.inexistentField for instance, in order to get the error. Any field that does not exist causes the error, so no real use providing an example, right? The code sample I did include was not aimed at reproducing an error, but at helping people understand the context of my question. Does that make sense?
@Ackdari - thank you, very helpful!
@MalcolmWright Compile error. Not an exception. Illegal code is illegal. Nothing in jshell can magically fix broken code.
@Reporter - sounds like reflection will have to be my next area of learning, thank you!
@ElliottFrisch - I understand that it is an error, and not an exception: that's the very reason for my question. I wanted to know WHY it is an error and not an exception. It may not be the best design decision, but shouldn't I be allowed to access fields dynamically, in such a way that an inexistent field might be requested, and if so, catch it as an exception rather than not be able to compile at all?
@AndyTurner - thank yes, as I mentioned in the question: I want to throw a specific exception and that's why I tried to discover what exception Java core classes throw when a field that does not exist is referenced. That's how I discovered that Java sees this as an error rather than an exception, prompting my question as to why that is. Thank you for suggesting the IllegalArgumentException - I'll use that.
@MalcolmWright Could you please provide the declaration of the field you use and the code calling your getAttribute method that causes the error
No. Compile time errors are not runtime exceptions. Not even close. You can do exactly what you describe with reflection (access fields dynamically), but you can't make up your own language features. For example, Java (unlike other languages) does not have operator overloading. Which is what you seem to actually want here. Maybe. As I said earlier, your "sample code" is not an example and is not helping here.
06:05
@ElliottFrisch Maybe the author want check an existing field at runtime. If the field is missing at compile time, he won't get any runable code.
Ok, no (in bold) is a strong indication you're not hearing me, and I won't insist. I'm under no illusion that compile time errors are runtime exceptions. I wouldn't be asking the question if that were my area of confusion. I just did not understand why it is an error, because I'm new to Java and don't know much about its architecture. It could have been coded to allow compilation of code that references a field that may or may not exist, which is why I sensed I was missing something about the philosophy.
@Ackdari - I will update the question
@ElliottFrisch - thanks for the downvote. Seems that despite the intent to improve the question as asked by another commenter, you've reacted vindictively. I'm new to the community, and hardly have any reputation anyway. Seems like a great way to welcome me.
@MalcolmWright jshell was only added in Java 9 (3 years ago). It's a relatively new feature of Java. For 20+ years there was no REPL at all. So asking for the philosophical reasons why jshell was implemented the way it was is kind of missing the point. It's not a historical part of Java. Also, I did not downvote your question.
You seem to be confusing java.lang.Error (which is a Throwable), with the concept of compile-time errors. Although both contain the word error, they are not the same concept.
Edit contains example, upvoted. This looks like a proper question now. You might get a good answer. Is there some reason you don't want to do throw new Exception("No such field: " + attribute);?
@ElliottFrisch - thanks - that's helpful. I did not realise I should not be basing my understanding purely on how jshell responds.
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@MalcolmWright I think (nearly) everyone would suggest you use a real IDE and ignore jshell except for trivial tests.
@ElliottFrisch - That's a reasonable exception to throw, like the other one suggested earlier (IllegalArgumentException)... My question was really only concerned with what it was about Java that causes this to be treated as a "serious problems that a reasonable application should not try to catch". More of a philosophical question.
@ElliottFrisch - I use eclipse, but thought this test was a good example of a trivial one (the test I ran in jshell was literally String.inexistantField
@MalcolmWright And the answer is because the Java compiler cannot generate runnable code with what you have given it. And jshell internally passes your text to the regular Java compiler. When that fails, there are only so many things jshell can do. Java is fundamentally a compiled language. Despite being run by an interpreter. Also of note is that eclipse uses its own compiler. See the first bullet point here.
@ElliottFrisch - understood, and I'm grateful for your insights, and for Ackdari's answer!

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