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The Java Workshop

You're reading from   The Java Workshop Learn object-oriented programming and kickstart your career in software development

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2019
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838986698
Length 606 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (3):
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Eric Foster-Johnson Eric Foster-Johnson
Author Profile Icon Eric Foster-Johnson
Eric Foster-Johnson
Andreas Göransson Andreas Göransson
Author Profile Icon Andreas Göransson
Andreas Göransson
David Cuartielles David Cuartielles
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David Cuartielles
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Toc

Table of Contents (20) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Started FREE CHAPTER 2. Learning the Basics 3. Object-Oriented Programming 4. Collections, Lists and Java's Built-In APIs 5. Exceptions 6. Libraries, Packages, and Modules 7. Databases and JDBC 8. Sockets, Files, and Streams 9. Working with HTTP 10. Encryption 11. Processes 12. Regular Expressions 13. Functional Programming with Lambda Expressions 14. Recursion 15. Processing Data with Streams 16. Predicates and Other Functional Interfaces 17. Reactive Programming with Java Flow 18. Unit Testing Appendix

Where Do Exceptions Come from?

Moving away from the more-pragmatic approach we have followed in this chapter, it is now time to put things into perspective and understand where things come from in the larger schema of the Java API. Exceptions, as mentioned in a previous section, hang from the Throwable class, which is part of the java.lang package. They are on the same level as errors (which we explained earlier). In other words, both Exception and Error are subclasses of Throwable.

Only object instances of the Throwable class can be thrown by the Java throw statement; therefore, the way we had to define our own exception implied using this class as a point of departure. As stated in the Java documentation for the Throwable class, this includes a snapshot of the execution stack at the time of creation. This allows you to look for the source of the exception (or the error) because it includes the state of computer memory at that time. A throwable object can contain the reason for...

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