The code inside a finally block will get executed regardless of whether or not there is an exception. This comes in very handy when it comes to certain housekeeping functions you need to always run like closing connections.
Now, I'm guessing your question is why you should do this:
try
{
doSomething();
}
catch
{
catchSomething();
}
finally
{
alwaysDoThis();
}
When you can do this:
try
{
doSomething();
}
catch
{
catchSomething();
}
alwaysDoThis();
The answer is that a lot of times the code inside your catch statement will either rethrow an exception or break out of the current function. With the latter code, the "alwaysDoThis();" call won't execute if the code inside the catch statement issues a return or throws a new exception.
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