Will the following append() in the catch cause the rethrown exception to see the effect of append() being called?
try {
mayThrowMyErr();
} catch (myErr &err) {
err.append("Add to my message here");
throw; // Does the rethrow exception reflect the call to append()?
}
Similarly, if I rewrite it this way, will bit slicing occur if the actual exception is derived by myErr?
try {
mayThrowObjectDerivedFromMyErr();
} catch (myErr &err) {
err.append("Add to my message's base class here");
throw err; // Do I lose the derived class exception and only get myErr?
}
In both cases, since you catch by reference, you are effectively altering the state of the original exception object (which you can think of as residing in a magical memory location which will stay valid during the subsequent unwinding -- 0x98e7058
in the example below). However,
throw;
(which, unlike throw err;
, preserves the original exception object, with your modifications, in said "magical location" at 0x98e7058
) will reflect the call to append()err
will be created then thrown anew (at a different "magical location" 0x98e70b0
-- because for all the compiler knows err
could be an object on the stack about to be unwinded, like e
was at 0xbfbce430
, not in the "magical location" at 0x98e7058
), so you will lose derived-class-specific data during the copy-construction of a base class instance.Simple program to illustrate what's happening:
#include <stdio.h>
struct MyErr {
MyErr() {
printf(" Base default constructor, this=%p\n", this);
}
MyErr(const MyErr& other) {
printf(" Base copy-constructor, this=%p from that=%p\n", this, &other);
}
virtual ~MyErr() {
printf(" Base destructor, this=%p\n", this);
}
};
struct MyErrDerived : public MyErr {
MyErrDerived() {
printf(" Derived default constructor, this=%p\n", this);
}
MyErrDerived(const MyErrDerived& other) {
printf(" Derived copy-constructor, this=%p from that=%p\n", this, &other);
}
virtual ~MyErrDerived() {
printf(" Derived destructor, this=%p\n", this);
}
};
int main() {
try {
try {
MyErrDerived e;
throw e;
} catch (MyErr& err) {
printf("A Inner catch, &err=%p\n", &err);
throw;
}
} catch (MyErr& err) {
printf("A Outer catch, &err=%p\n", &err);
}
printf("---\n");
try {
try {
MyErrDerived e;
throw e;
} catch (MyErr& err) {
printf("B Inner catch, &err=%p\n", &err);
throw err;
}
} catch (MyErr& err) {
printf("B Outer catch, &err=%p\n", &err);
}
return 0;
}
Result:
Base default constructor, this=0xbfbce430
Derived default constructor, this=0xbfbce430
Base default constructor, this=0x98e7058
Derived copy-constructor, this=0x98e7058 from that=0xbfbce430
Derived destructor, this=0xbfbce430
Base destructor, this=0xbfbce430
A Inner catch, &err=0x98e7058
A Outer catch, &err=0x98e7058
Derived destructor, this=0x98e7058
Base destructor, this=0x98e7058
---
Base default constructor, this=0xbfbce430
Derived default constructor, this=0xbfbce430
Base default constructor, this=0x98e7058
Derived copy-constructor, this=0x98e7058 from that=0xbfbce430
Derived destructor, this=0xbfbce430
Base destructor, this=0xbfbce430
B Inner catch, &err=0x98e7058
Base copy-constructor, this=0x98e70b0 from that=0x98e7058
Derived destructor, this=0x98e7058
Base destructor, this=0x98e7058
B Outer catch, &err=0x98e70b0
Base destructor, this=0x98e70b0
Also see: