It was introduced because of some resources used in Java (like SQL connections or streams) being difficult to be handled properly; as an example, in java 6 to handle a InputStream properly you had to do something like:
InputStream stream = new MyInputStream(...);
try {
// ... use stream
} catch(IOException e) {
// handle exception
} finally {
try {
if(stream != null) {
stream.close();
}
} catch(IOException e) {
// handle yet another possible exception
}
}
Do you notice that ugly double try? now with try-with-resources you can do this:
try (InputStream stream = new MyInputStream(...)){
// ... use stream
} catch(IOException e) {
// handle exception
}
and close() is automatically called, if it throws an IOException, it will be supressed (as specified in the Java Language Specification 14.20.3) . Same happens for java.sql.Connection
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