How to: Implement I/O Try...Catch Blocks in Visual Basic
The following code example implements a Try...Catch block that handles Exception, IOException, and all the exceptions that derive from IOException.
Example
This example moves from the most specific to the least specific; each exception is tested in turn.
This code example is also available as an IntelliSense code snippet. In the code snippet picker, it is located in File system - Processing Drives, Folders, and Files. For more information, see How to: Insert Snippets Into Your Code (Visual Basic).
Try
' Add code for your I/O task here.
Catch dirNotFound As System.IO.DirectoryNotFoundException
' Code to handle DirectoryNotFoundException.
Catch fileNotFound As System.IO.FileNotFoundException
' Code to handle FileNotFoundException.
Catch pathTooLong As System.IO.PathTooLongException
' Code to handle PathTooLongException.
Catch ioEx As System.IO.IOException
' Code to handle IOException.
Catch security As System.Security.SecurityException
' Code to handle SecurityException.
Catch ex As Exception
' Rethrow exception if anything else has occurred.
Throw ex
Finally
' Dispose of any resources you used or opened in the Try block.
End Try
Compiling the Code
Add the code you want to execute to the Try block.
Robust Programming
Use this block of code as a starting point for wrapping a data operation in a Try...Catch statement. This Try...Catch block is designed to catch and rethrow all exceptions. That may not be the right choice for your project. For a discussion on exception-handling options, see Best Practices for Using IntelliSense Code Snippets.
You can reduce the likelihood of exceptions by using Windows Forms controls such as the OpenFileDialog Component (Windows Forms) component and the SaveFileDialog Component (Windows Forms) component controls that limit the user choices to valid file names. The FileInfo.Exists property can check whether a file exists before you try to open it. Using these controls and classes is not foolproof, however. The file system can change between the time the user selects a file and the time that the code runs. Exception handling will therefore nearly always be required when with working with files.
Security
For many file tasks, the assembly requires a privilege level granted by the FileIOPermission class. If you are running in a partial-trust context, the code might throw an exception due to insufficient privileges. For more information, see Code Access Security Basics. The user also needs access to the file, should it exist. For more information, see Access Control Lists (ACLs).
Do not make decisions about the contents of the file based on the file name extension. For example, the file Form1.vb may not be a Visual Basic source file.
See Also
Tasks
How to: Filter Errors in a Catch Block in Visual Basic
How to: Check an Exception's Inner Exception
Concepts
Best Practices for Using IntelliSense Code Snippets
Structured Exception Handling Overview for Visual Basic
Choosing When to Use Structured and Unstructured Exception Handling
Reference
Try...Catch...Finally Statement (Visual Basic)