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- From: David Megginson <david@megginson.com>
- To: xml-dev@ic.ac.uk
- Date: Thu, 23 Dec 1999 13:44:17 -0500 (EST)
Hill, Les writes:
> David Megginson writes:
> > In the end, though, this is a relatively minor point. The important
> > point, for me, is that SAXException extend IOException -- I
> > think that
> > it would be convenient to have the callbacks throw IOException rather
> > than SAXException (otherwise, other IOExceptions will have to
> > tunnel),
> > but it's not a show-stopper if everyone else thinks it's a bad idea.
>
> I'll agree it is a relatively minor point, but if the only reason is
> "otherwise, other IOExceptions will have to tunnel" then it is a truly
> horrible idea which at its extreme boils down to 'Lets just throw Exception
> so that no exceptions are tunneled'. Perhaps there is a more cogent
> argument to made about it?
Well, no, that's just an aside. There are two main points:
1. Is SAXException logically a kind of I/O exception?
After a lot of thought (and practical experience writing apps and
libraries that use SAX), I'm certain that the answer to this
question is 'yes'. I know that to many of us on the list, XML is
the sun, the moon, and the stars, but for the rest of the world
it's just a fancy format that you can write information to or read
it from -- in other words, XML is almost never the point, just a
means.
From that point of view, reading information from an XML document
is a kind of I/O, so it makes sense for SAXException to be a kind
of IOException.
2. Should SAX2 callbacks throw IOException or SAXException?
This is the trickier one of the two, and it really depends on your
perspective. From a pure XML perspective, it would be best to
have the handlers throw SAXException, because any errors should be
strictly XML-syntax-related.
For someone using XML as an interchange format, however, the goal
is to get the information that the XML document represents, and the
niceties of the distinction between XML syntax errors and other
kinds of I/O errors is not really significant. If the XML markup
points to another file, and I cannot read that file, it's just as
much an I/O problem as if the document itself is malformed: in both
cases, I've failed to load the information I want, so it's an I/O
failure. I'm not as confident of this point, but that's the best
argument I can put forward for it.
The tunnelling point can be paraphrased as "if we're dealing with
I/O anyway, why force IOExceptions to be tunnelled". As an
interested historical note, though, the very first prototype SAX
handlers I posted, about two years ago, did throw Exception.
So, to summarize, I'm pretty sure that a SAXException is a kind of
IOException, but I'm still trying to figure out whether it's best for
SAX callbacks to throw SAXException (as in SAX1) or IOException.
All the best,
David
--
David Megginson david@megginson.com
http://www.megginson.com/
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