If someone calls my method, I want to defensively deal with the problem. Usually I just return null
.
I decided to implement a try
catch
but it looks like I just end up returning null
anyway.
Can I write my try
catch
in such a way that at the end of method it doesn't return null
?
Sample code, using peek
on a Stack class.
public T peek()
{
T temp = null;
try
{
temp = array[size];
}
catch(Exception e)
{
}
return temp;
}
When called with an empty stack. It will return null
.
So should I even bother with the try
catch
for this kind of case? I am tempted to do this:
if(isEmpty())
return null;
If the stack is not empty I want to return the element. If the stack is empty then can I avoid returning null if I use the try-catch
?