From C# 6 on, you can use the when
keyword to specify a condition before handling an exception.
Consider this - pretty useless, I have to admit - type of exception:
public class RandomException : System.Exception
{
public int Value { get; }
public RandomException()
{
Value = (new Random()).Next();
}
}
This exception type contains a Value
property which is populated with a random value when the exception is thrown.
What if you want to print a different message depending on whether the Value
property is odd or even?
You can do it this way:
try
{
throw new RandomException();
}
catch (RandomException re)
{
if(re.Value % 2 == 0)
Console.WriteLine("Exception with even value");
else
Console.WriteLine("Exception with odd value");
}
But, well, you should keep your catch
blocks as simple as possible.
That's where the when
keyword comes in handy.
CSharp when clause
You can use it to create two distinct catch
blocks, each one of them handles their case in the cleanest way possible.
try
{
throw new RandomException();
}
catch (RandomException re) when (re.Value % 2 == 0)
{
Console.WriteLine("Exception with even value");
}
catch (RandomException re)
{
Console.WriteLine("Exception with odd value");
}
You must use the when
keyword in conjunction with a condition, which can also reference the current instance of the exception being caught. In fact, the condition references the Value
property of the RandomException
instance.
A real usage: HTTP response errors
Ok, that example with the random exception is a bit... useless?
Let's see a real example: handling different HTTP status codes in case of failing HTTP calls.
In the following snippet, I call an endpoint that returns a specified status code (506, in my case).
try
{
var endpoint = "https://mock.codes/506";
var httpClient = new HttpClient();
var response = await httpClient.GetAsync(endpoint);
response.EnsureSuccessStatusCode();
}
catch (HttpRequestException ex) when (ex.StatusCode == (HttpStatusCode)506)
{
Console.WriteLine("Handle 506: Variant also negotiates");
}
catch (HttpRequestException ex)
{
Console.WriteLine("Handle another status code");
}
If the response is not a success, the response.EnsureSuccessStatusCode()
throws an exception of type HttpRequestException
. The thrown exception contains some info about the returned status code, which we can use to route the exception handling to the correct catch
block using when (ex.StatusCode == (HttpStatusCode)506)
.
Quite interesting, uh? π
To read more, you can head to the official documentation, even though there's not so much.
Happy coding!
π§
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