Error Handling
Asserting
Section titled “Asserting”@implemenetation Triangle
...
-(void)setAngles:(NSArray *)_angles { self.angles = _angles;
NSAssert((self.angles.count == 3), @"Triangles must have 3 angles. Array '%@' has %i", self.angles, (int)self.angles.count);
CGFloat angleA = [self.angles[0] floatValue]; CGFloat angleB = [self.angles[1] floatValue]; CGFloat angleC = [self.angles[2] floatValue]; CGFloat sum = (angleA + angleB + angleC); NSAssert((sum == M_PI), @"Triangles' angles must add up to pi radians (180°). This triangle's angles add up to %f radians (%f°)", (float)sum, (float)(sum * (180.0f / M_PI)));}These assertions make sure that you don’t give a triangle incorrect angles, by throwing an exception if you do. If they didn’t throw an exception than the triangle, not being a true triangle at all, might cause some bugs in later code.
Error & Exception handling with try catch block
Section titled “Error & Exception handling with try catch block”Exceptions represent programmer-level bugs like trying to access an array element that doesn’t exist.
Errors are user-level issues like trying load a file that doesn’t exist. Because errors are expected during the normal execution of a program.
Example:
NSArray *inventory = @[@"Sam", @"John", @"Sanju"]; int selectedIndex = 3; @try { NSString * name = inventory[selectedIndex]; NSLog(@"The selected Name is: %@", name); } @catch(NSException *theException) { NSLog(@"An exception occurred: %@", theException.name); NSLog(@"Here are some details: %@", theException.reason); } @finally { NSLog(@"Executing finally block"); }OUTPUT:
An exception occurred: NSRangeException
Here are some details: *** -[__NSArrayI objectAtIndex:]: index 3 beyond bounds [0 .. 2]
Executing finally block
Syntax
Section titled “Syntax”- NSAssert(condition, fmtMessage, arg1, arg2, …) (args in italics are optional) — Asserts that condition evaluates to a true value. If it doesn’t than the assertion will raise an exception (NSAssertionException), with the fmtMessage formatted with the args provided