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Home/ Questions/Q 559753
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T12:16:15+00:00 2026-05-13T12:16:15+00:00

Yesterday I took part in a discussion on SO devoted to OutOfMemoryException and the

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Yesterday I took part in a discussion on SO devoted to OutOfMemoryException and the pros and cons of handling it (C# try {} catch {}).

My pros for handling it were:

  • The fact that OutOfMemoryException was thrown doesn’t generally mean that the state of a program was corrupted;
  • According to documentation “the following Microsoft intermediate (MSIL) instructions throw OutOfMemoryException: box, newarr, newobj” which just (usually) means that the CLR attempted to find a block of memory of a given size and was unable to do that; it does not mean that no single byte left at our disposition;

But not all people were agree with that and speculated about unknown program state after this exception and an inability to do something useful since it will require even more memory.

Therefore my question is: what are the serious reasons not to handle OutOfMemoryException and immediately give up when it occurs?

Edited: Do you think that OOME is as fatal as ExecutionEngineException?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T12:16:16+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 12:16 pm

    We all write different applications. In a WinForms or ASP.Net app I would probably just log the exception, notify the user, try to save state, and shutdown/restart. But as Igor mentioned in the comments this could very well be from building some form of image editing application and the process of loading the 100th 20MB RAW image could push the app over the edge. Do you really want the use to lose all of their work from something as simple as saying. “Sorry, unable to load more images at this time”.

    Another common instance that it could be useful to catch out of memory exceptions is in back end batch processing. You could have a standard model of loading multi-mega-byte files into memory for processing, but then one day out of the blue a multi-giga-byte file is loaded. When the out-of-memory occurs you could log the message to a user notification queue and then move on to the next file.

    Yes it is possible that something else could blow at the same time, but those too would be logged and notified if possible. If finally the GC is unable to process any more memory the application is going to go down hard anyway. (The GC runs in an unprotected thread.)

    Don’t forget we all develop different types of applications. And unless you are on older, constrained machines you will probably never get an OutOfMemoryException for typical business apps… but then again not all of us are business tool developers.

    To your edit…

    Out-of-memory may be caused by unmanaged memory fragmentation and pinning. It can also be caused by large allocation requests. If we were to put up a white flag and draw a line in the sand over such simple issues, nothing would ever get done in large data processing projects. Now comparing that to a fatal Engine exception, well there is nothing you can do at the point the runtime falls over dead under your code. Hopefully you are able to log (but probably not) why your code fell on its face so you can prevent it in the future. But, more importantly, hopefully your code is written in a manner that could allow for safe recovery of as much data as you can. Maybe even recover the last known good state in your application and possibly skip the offending corrupt data and allow it to be manually processed and recovered.

    Yet at the same time it is just as possible to have data corruption caused by SQL injection, out-of-sync versions of software, pointer manipulation, buffer over runs, and many other problems. Avoiding an issue just because you think you may not recover from it is a great way to give users error messages as constructive as Please contact your system administrator.

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