One more reason is that System.out and err are PrintStreams, which are consuming all underlying IOExceptions. See this methods of PrintStreams:
/**
* Writes the specified byte to this stream. If the byte is a newline and
* automatic flushing is enabled then the <code>flush</code> method will be
* invoked.
*
* <p> Note that the byte is written as given; to write a character that
* will be translated according to the platform's default character
* encoding, use the <code>print(char)</code> or <code>println(char)</code>
* methods.
*
* @param b The byte to be written
* @see #print(char)
* @see #println(char)
*/
public void write(int b) {
try {
synchronized (this) {
ensureOpen();
out.write(b);
if ((b == '\n') && autoFlush)
out.flush();
}
}
catch (InterruptedIOException x) {
Thread.currentThread().interrupt();
}
catch (IOException x) {
trouble = true;
}
}
/**
* Flushes the stream and checks its error state. The internal error state
* is set to <code>true</code> when the underlying output stream throws an
* <code>IOException</code> other than <code>InterruptedIOException</code>,
* and when the <code>setError</code> method is invoked. If an operation
* on the underlying output stream throws an
* <code>InterruptedIOException</code>, then the <code>PrintStream</code>
* converts the exception back into an interrupt by doing:
* <pre>
* Thread.currentThread().interrupt();
* </pre>
* or the equivalent.
*
* @return <code>true</code> if and only if this stream has encountered an
* <code>IOException</code> other than
* <code>InterruptedIOException</code>, or the
* <code>setError</code> method has been invoked
*/
public boolean checkError() {
if (out != null)
flush();
if (out instanceof java.io.PrintStream) {
PrintStream ps = (PrintStream) out;
return ps.checkError();
}
return trouble;
}
So an IOException from the underlying stream is ALWAYS consumed, and usually the people never call checkError on System out, so they are not even knowing that something happened.