Table of Contents
Most exception classes are defined in one of the standard headers
<exception>
,
<stdexcept>
,
<new>
, and
<typeinfo>
.
The C++ 2011 revision of the standard added more exception types
in the headers
<functional>
,
<future>
,
<regex>
, and
<system_error>
.
The C++ 2017 revision of the standard added more exception types
in the headers
<any>
,
<filesystem>
,
<optional>
, and
<variant>
.
All exceptions thrown by the library have a base class of type
std::exception
,
defined in <exception>
.
This type has no std::string
member.
Derived from this are several classes that may have a
std::string
member. A full hierarchy can be
found in the source documentation.
The standard exception classes carry with them a single string as data (usually describing what went wrong or where the 'throw' took place). It's good to remember that you can add your own data to these exceptions when extending the hierarchy:
struct My_Exception : public std::runtime_error { public: My_Exception (const string& whatarg) : std::runtime_error(whatarg), e(errno), id(GetDataBaseID()) { } int errno_at_time_of_throw() const { return e; } DBID id_of_thing_that_threw() const { return id; } protected: int e; DBID id; // some user-defined type };