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Difference between catch (Exception), catch () and just catch I recommend using catch(Exception ex) when you plan to reuse the exception variable only, and catch (alone) in other cases Just a matter of style for the second use case, but if personally find it more simple
Placement of catch BEFORE and AFTER then - Stack Overflow In the second scheme, if the promise p rejects, then the catch() handler is called If you return a normal value or a promise that eventually resolves from the catch() handler (thus "handling" the error), then the promise chain switches to the resolved state and the then() handler after the catch() will be called So that's difference #2
The difference between try catch throw and try catch(e) throw e The third try-catch block is different When it throws the exception, it will change the source and the stack trace, so that it will appear that the exception has been thrown from this method, from that very line throw e on the method containing that try-catch block Which one should you use? It really depends on each case
c# - Catch multiple exceptions at once? - Stack Overflow try { WebId = new Guid(queryString["web"]); } catch (FormatException) { WebId = Guid Empty; } catch (OverflowException) { WebId = Guid Empty; } Is there a way to catch both exceptions and only set WebId = Guid Empty once? The given example is rather simple, as it's only a GUID, but imagine code where you modify an object multiple times, and if one of the manipulations fails as expected, you