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Having a mental block today, need a hand verifying my logic isn't fubar'ed.

Traditionally I would do file i/o similar to this:

FileStream fs = null; // So it's visible in the finally block
try
{
   fs = File.Open("Foo.txt", FileMode.Open);

   /// Do Stuff
}
catch(IOException)
{
   /// Handle Stuff
}
finally
{
   if (fs != null)
      fs.Close();
}

However, this isn't very elegant.

Ideally I'd like to use the using block to dispose of the filestream when I'm done, however I am unsure about the synergy between using and try/catch.

This is how i'd like to implement the above:

try
{
   using(FileStream fs = File.Open("Foo.txt", FileMode.Open))
   {
      /// Do Stuff
   }
}
catch(Exception)
{
   /// Handle Stuff
}

However, I'm worried that a premature exit (via thrown exception) from within the using block may not allow the using block to complete execution and clean up it's object. Am I just paranoid, or will this actually work the way I intend it to?

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1 Answer

You're just being paranoid and it will work the way you intend it to :)

A using statement is equivalent to a try/finally block, whether it's inside a try/catch or not.

So your code is similar to:

try
{
   FileStream fs = null;
   try
   {
       fs = File.Open("Foo.txt", FileMode.Open);
       // Do stuff
   }
   finally
   {
       if (fs != null)
       {
           fs.Dispose();
       }
   }
}
catch(Exception)
{
   /// Handle Stuff
}

与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…
thumb_up_alt 0 like thumb_down_alt 0 dislike
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