Catching specific vs. generic exceptions in c#
- by Scott Vercuski
This question comes from a code analysis run against an object I've created. The analysis says that I should catch a more specific exception type than just the basic Exception.
Do you find yourself using just catching the generic Exception or attempting to catch a specific Exception and defaulting to a generic Exception using multiple catch blocks?
One of the code chunks in question is below:
internal static bool ClearFlags(string connectionString, Guid ID)
{
bool returnValue = false;
SqlConnection dbEngine = new SqlConnection(connectionString);
SqlCommand dbCmd = new SqlCommand("ClearFlags", dbEngine);
SqlDataAdapter dataAdapter = new SqlDataAdapter(dbCmd);
dbCmd.CommandType = CommandType.StoredProcedure;
try
{
dbCmd.Parameters.AddWithValue("@ID", ID.ToString());
dbEngine.Open();
dbCmd.ExecuteNonQuery();
dbEngine.Close();
returnValue = true;
}
catch (Exception ex)
{ ErrorHandler(ex); }
return returnValue;
}
Thank you for your advice
EDIT: Here is the warning from the code analysis
Warning 351 CA1031 : Microsoft.Design : Modify 'ClearFlags(string, Guid)' to catch a more specific exception than 'Exception' or rethrow the exception