The following post discusses the type of a throw expression: In C++, if throw is an expression, what is its type?. I would like to clarify a more basic thing: why should throw be an expression and not a (non-expression) statement just like return in the first place? I mean, would anyone want to write something like auto x = throw std::runtime_error("Error message")?
If throw were a statement you couldn't use it with the conditional operator.
return success()
? computation()
: throw std::runtime_error("oops");
Note : this may or may not have uses outside code obfuscation.
Edit : one useful case is inside C++11's strict constexpr functions which can only contain one instruction. Thanks @dyp for the insight !
If you love us? You can donate to us via Paypal or buy me a coffee so we can maintain and grow! Thank you!
Donate Us With