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Hands-On Object-Oriented Programming with C#

You're reading from   Hands-On Object-Oriented Programming with C# Build maintainable software with reusable code using C#

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2019
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788296229
Length 288 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Authors (2):
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Abhishek Sur Abhishek Sur
Author Profile Icon Abhishek Sur
Abhishek Sur
Raihan Taher Raihan Taher
Author Profile Icon Raihan Taher
Raihan Taher
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Toc

Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Overview of C# as a Language 2. Hello OOP - Classes and Objects FREE CHAPTER 3. Implementation of OOP in C# 4. Object Collaboration 5. Exception Handling 6. Events and Delegates 7. Generics in C# 8. Modeling and Designing Software 9. Visual Studio and Associated Tools 10. Exploring ADO.NET with Examples 11. New Features in C# 8 12. Understanding Design Patterns and Principles 13. Git - The Version Control System 14. Prepare Yourself - Interviews and the Future 15. Other Books You May Enjoy

Try and catch

The try and catch keywords are the two most important keywords for exception handling in C#. If you write a try block without a catch block, then it won't make any sense because, if a try block throws an exception and there is no catch block to handle it, then what is the benefit? The exception will still be unhandled. The catch block actually depends on a try block. A catch block can't exist if there is no try block associated with it. Let's look at how we can write a try-catch block:

try 
{
int a = 5 / 0;
}
catch(DivideByZeroException ex)
{
Console.WriteLine(“You have divided by zero”);
}

We can also have more catch blocks for a try block. Let's look at an example of this:

try 
{
int a = 5 / 0;
}
catch(DivideByZeroException ex)
{
Console.WriteLine(“You have divided by zero”);
}
catch(Exception ex)
{
Console.WriteLine...
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