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Home/ Questions/Q 8283969
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 8, 20262026-06-08T10:55:49+00:00 2026-06-08T10:55:49+00:00

I have the following chunk of code in my constructor (This is just an

  • 0

I have the following chunk of code in my constructor (This is just an example, the question isn’t about split, rather about throwing a generic exception. Also, Boost library can’t be used.

Transfer::Transfer(const string &dest){
  try{
    struct stat st;
    char * token;
    std::string path(PATH_SEPARATOR) // if it is \ or / this macro will solve it
    token = strtok((char*)dest.c_str(), PATH_SEPARATOR) // 
    while(token != NULL){
        path += token;
        if(stat(path.c_str(), &st) != 0){
            if(mkdir(path.c_str()) != 0){
                 std:string msg("Error creating the directory\n");
                 throw exception // here is where this question lies
            }
        }

        token = strtok(NULL, PATH_SEPARATOR);
        path += PATH_SEPARATOR;

    }
  }catch(std::exception &e){
       //catch an exception which kills the program
       // the program shall not continue working.
  }

}

What I want is to throw an exception if the directory does not exist and it can’t be created. I want to throw a generic exception, how could I do it in C++?
PS: dest has the following format:

dest = /usr/var/temp/current/tree
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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-08T10:55:50+00:00Added an answer on June 8, 2026 at 10:55 am

    Please check this answer. This explains how to use your own exception class

    class myException: public std::runtime_error
    {
        public:
            myException(std::string const& msg):
                std::runtime_error(msg)
            {}
    };
    
    void Transfer(){
      try{
              throw myException("Error creating the directory\n");
      }catch(std::exception &e){
          cout << "Exception " << e.what() << endl;
           //catch an exception which kills the program
           // the program shall not continue working.
      }
    
    }
    

    Also, if you don’t want your own class, you can do this simply by

     throw std::runtime_error("Error creating the directory\n");
    
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