Exceptions in Raku are objects that hold information about errors. An error can be, for example, the unexpected receiving of data or a network connection no longer available, or a missing file. The information that an exception object stores is, for instance, a human-readable message about the error condition, the backtrace of the raising of the error, and so on.
All built-in exceptions inherit from Exception, which provides some basic behavior, including the storage of a backtrace and an interface for the backtrace printer.
Ad hoc exceptions §
Ad hoc exceptions can be used by calling die with a description of the error:
die "oops, something went wrong";# OUTPUT: «oops, something went wrong in block <unit> at my-script.p6:1»
It is worth noting that die
prints the error message to the standard error $*ERR
.
Typed exceptions §
Typed exceptions provide more information about the error stored within an exception object.
For example, if while executing .frobnicate
on an object, a needed path foo/bar
becomes unavailable, then an X::IO::DoesNotExist exception can be thrown:
method frobnicate()
frobnicate("foo/bar");# OUTPUT: «Failed to find 'foo/bar' while trying to do '.frobnicate' # in block <unit> at my-script.p6:1»
Note how the object has provided the backtrace with information about what went wrong. A user of the code can now more easily find and correct the problem.
Instead of calling the .throw
method on the X::IO::DoesNotExist
object, one can also use that object as a parameter to die
:
die X::IO::DoesNotExist.new(:, :trying("frobnicate"));
Catching exceptions §
It's possible to handle exceptional circumstances by supplying a CATCH
block:
CATCH X::IO::DoesNotExist.new(:, :trying("frobnicate")).throw # OUTPUT: «some kind of IO exception was caught!»
Here, we are saying that if any exception of type X::IO
occurs, then the message some kind of IO exception was caught!
will be sent to stderr, which is what $*ERR.say
does, getting displayed on whatever constitutes the standard error device in that moment, which will probably be the console by default.
A CATCH
block uses smartmatching similar to how given/when
smartmatches on options, thus it's possible to catch and handle various categories of exceptions inside a when
block. And it does so because, within the block, $_
is set to the exception that has been raised.
To handle all exceptions, use a default
statement. This example prints out almost the same information as the normal backtrace printer; the dot methods apply to $_
, which holds the Exception
within the CATCH
block.
CATCH
Note that the match target is a role. To allow user defined exceptions to match in the same manner, they must implement the given role. Just existing in the same namespace will look alike but won't match in a CATCH
block.
Note that the CATCH
block semantics apply to the entire lexical scope in which it is defined, regardless of where it is defined inside that lexical scope. It is therefore advised to put any CATCH
block at the start of the lexical scope to which they apply so that the casual reader of the code can immediately see that there is something special going on.
Exception handlers and enclosing blocks §
After a CATCH has handled the exception, the block enclosing the CATCH
block is exited.
In other words, even when the exception is handled successfully, the rest of the code in the enclosing block will never be executed.
die "something went wrong ..."; CATCH say "This won't be said."; # but this line will be never reached since # the enclosing block will be exited immediately # OUTPUT: «something went wrong ...»
Compare with this:
CATCH say "Hi! I am at the outer block!"; # OUTPUT: «Hi! I am at the outer block!»
See Resuming of exceptions, for how to return control back to where the exception originated.
try
blocks
§
A try
block is a normal block which implicitly turns on the use fatal
pragma and includes an implicit CATCH
block that drops the exception, which means you can use it to contain them. Caught exceptions are stored inside the $!
variable, which holds a value of type Exception
.
A normal block like this one will simply fail:
# OUTPUT: «Failure»
However, a try
block will contain the exception and put it into the $!
variable:
try if $! # OUTPUT: «Something failed!» say $!.^name; # OUTPUT: «X::Str::Numeric»
Any exception that is thrown in such a block will be caught by a CATCH
block, either implicit or provided by the user. In the latter case, any unhandled exception will be rethrown. If you choose not to handle the exception, they will be contained by the block.
try try
In both try
blocks above, exceptions will be contained within the block, but the say
statement will not be run. We can handle them, though:
is Exception try say "I'm alive!"; try
Which would output:
I'm alive! No, I expect you to DIE Mr. Bond! I'm immortal. Just stop already! in block <unit> at exception.p6 line 21
Since the CATCH
block is handling just the X::AdHoc
exception thrown by the die
statement, but not the E
exception. In the absence of a CATCH
block, all exceptions will be contained and dropped, as indicated above. resume
will resume execution right after the exception has been thrown; in this case, in the die
statement. Please consult the section on resuming of exceptions for more information on this.
A try
-block is a normal block and as such treats its last statement as the return value of itself. We can therefore use it as a right-hand side.
say try // "oh no"; # OUTPUT: «99999» say try // "oh no"; # OUTPUT: «oh no»
Try blocks support else
blocks indirectly by returning the return value of the expression or Nil if an exception was thrown.
with try +"♥" else # OUTPUT: «not my number!»
try
can also be used with a statement instead of a block, that is, as a statement prefix:
say try "some-filename.txt".IO.slurp // "sane default";# OUTPUT: «sane default»
What try
actually causes is, via the use fatal
pragma, an immediate throw of the exceptions that happen within its scope, but by doing so the CATCH
block is invoked from the point where the exception is thrown, which defines its scope.
my = "333";sub bad-sub try # OUTPUT: «Error 111 X::AdHoc: Something bad happened»
Throwing exceptions §
Exceptions can be thrown explicitly with the .throw
method of an Exception
object.
This example throws an AdHoc
exception, catches it and allows the code to continue from the point of the exception by calling the .resume
method.
"OBAI".say; # OUTPUT: «OHAIOBAI»
If the CATCH
block doesn't match the exception thrown, then the exception's payload is passed on to the backtrace printing mechanism.
"OBAI".say; # OUTPUT: «foo # in block <unit> at my-script.p6:1»
This next example doesn't resume from the point of the exception. Instead, it continues after the enclosing block, since the exception is caught, and then control continues after the CATCH
block.
"OBAI".say; # OUTPUT: «OBAI»
throw
can be viewed as the method form of die
, just that in this particular case, the sub and method forms of the routine have different names.
Resuming of exceptions §
Exceptions interrupt control flow and divert it away from the statement following the statement that threw it. Any exception handled by the user can be resumed and control flow will continue with the statement following the statement that threw the exception. To do so, call the method .resume
on the exception object.
CATCH # this is step 2 die "We leave control after this."; # this is step 1 say "We have continued with control flow."; # this is step 3
Resuming will occur right after the statement that has caused the exception, and in the innermost call frame:
sub bad-sub # OUTPUT: # Error X::AdHoc: Something bad happened # Returned not returning
In this case, .resume
is getting to the return
statement that happens right after the die
statement. Please note that the assignment to $return
is taking no effect, since the CATCH
statement is happening inside the call to bad-sub
, which, via the return
statement, assigns the not returning
value to it.
Uncaught exceptions §
If an exception is thrown and not caught, it causes the program to exit with a non-zero status code, and typically prints a message to the standard error stream of the program. This message is obtained by calling the gist
method on the exception object. You can use this to suppress the default behavior of printing a backtrace along with the message:
is X::AdHoc die X::WithoutLineNumber.new(payload => "message") # prints "message\n" to $*ERR and exits, no backtrace
Control exceptions §
Control exceptions are raised when throwing an Exception which does the X::Control role (since Rakudo 2019.03). They are usually thrown by certain keywords and are handled either automatically or by the appropriate phaser. Any unhandled control exception is converted to a normal exception.
# OUTPUT: «X::ControlFlow::Return: Attempt to return outside of any Routine» # was CX::Return