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Is it possible to determine if code is currently executing in the context of a finally handler as a result of an exception being thrown? I'm rather fond of using the IDisposable pattern to implement entry/exit scoping functionality, but one concern with this pattern is that you might not necessarily want the end-of-scope behavior to occur if an exception occurs in the body of the using. I'd be looking for something like this:

public static class MyClass
{
    public static void MyMethod()
    {
        using (var scope = MyScopedBehavior.Begin())
        {
            //Do stuff with scope here
        }
    }
}

public sealed class MyScopedBehavior : IDisposable
{
    private MyScopedBehavior()
    {
        //Start of scope behavior
    }

    public void Dispose()
    {
        //I only want to execute the following if we're not unwinding
        //through finally due to an exception:
        //...End of scope behavior    
    }

    public static MyScopedBehavior Begin()
    {
        return new MyScopedBehavior();
    }
}

There are other ways I can accomplish this (pass a delegate to a function that surrounds the call with particular behavior), but I'm curious if it's possible to do it using the IDisposable pattern.


Actually, this has apparently been asked and answered before here. It's possible to detect in a very hackish sort of way. I wouldn't actually use that technique, but it's interesting to know that it's possible.

See Question&Answers more detail:os

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The means of accomplishing this that I've seen require an extra method:

public static void MyMethod()
{
    using (var scope = MyScopedBehavior.Begin())
    {
        //Do stuff with scope here
        scope.Complete(); // Tells the scope that it's good
    }
}

By doing this, your scope object can track whether it's disposing because of an error, or a successful operation. This is the approach taken by TransactionScope, for example (see TransactionScope.Complete).


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