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Home/ Questions/Q 914683
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T17:45:31+00:00 2026-05-15T17:45:31+00:00

Normally, I’d do this: try { code code that might throw an anticipated exception

  • 0

Normally, I’d do this:

try
{
    code

    code that might throw an anticipated exception you want to handle

    code

    code that might throw an anticipated exception you want to handle

    code
}
catch 
{

}

Are there any benefits to doing it this way?

code

try
{
    code that might throw an anticipated exception you want to handle
}
catch
{
}

code

try
{
    code that might throw an anticipated exception you want to handle
}
catch
{
}

code

Update:

I originally asked this question w/reference to C#, but as A. Levy commented, it could apply to any exception handling language, so I made the tags reflect that.

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T17:45:32+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 5:45 pm

    It depends. If you want to provide special handling for specific errors then use multiple catch blocks:

    try
    { 
        // code that throws an exception
        // this line won't execute
    }
    catch (StackOverflowException ex)
    {
        // special handling for StackOverflowException 
    }
    catch (Exception ex)
    {
       // all others
    }
    

    If, however, the intent is to handle an exception and continue executing, place the code in separate try-catch blocks:

    try
    { 
        // code that throws an exception
    
    }
    catch (Exception ex)
    {
       // handle
    }
    
    try
    { 
        // this code will execute unless the previous catch block 
        // throws an exception (re-throw or new exception) 
    }
    catch (Exception ex)
    {
       // handle
    }
    
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