Is there a difference between "throw" and "throw ex"?

(I posted earlier, and @Marc Gravell has corrected me)

Here's a demonstration of the difference:

static void Main(string[] args) {
    try {
        ThrowException1(); // line 19
    } catch (Exception x) {
        Console.WriteLine("Exception 1:");
        Console.WriteLine(x.StackTrace);
    }
    try {
        ThrowException2(); // line 25
    } catch (Exception x) {
        Console.WriteLine("Exception 2:");
        Console.WriteLine(x.StackTrace);
    }
}

private static void ThrowException1() {
    try {
        DivByZero(); // line 34
    } catch {
        throw; // line 36
    }
}
private static void ThrowException2() {
    try {
        DivByZero(); // line 41
    } catch (Exception ex) {
        throw ex; // line 43
    }
}

private static void DivByZero() {
    int x = 0;
    int y = 1 / x; // line 49
}

and here is the output:

Exception 1:
   at UnitTester.Program.DivByZero() in <snip>\Dev\UnitTester\Program.cs:line 49
   at UnitTester.Program.ThrowException1() in <snip>\Dev\UnitTester\Program.cs:line 36
   at UnitTester.Program.TestExceptions() in <snip>\Dev\UnitTester\Program.cs:line 19

Exception 2:
   at UnitTester.Program.ThrowException2() in <snip>\Dev\UnitTester\Program.cs:line 43
   at UnitTester.Program.TestExceptions() in <snip>\Dev\UnitTester\Program.cs:line 25

You can see that in Exception 1, the stack trace goes back to the DivByZero() method, whereas in Exception 2 it does not.

Take note, though, that the line number shown in ThrowException1() and ThrowException2() is the line number of the throw statement, not the line number of the call to DivByZero(), which probably makes sense now that I think about it a bit...

Output in Release mode

Exception 1:

at ConsoleAppBasics.Program.ThrowException1()
at ConsoleAppBasics.Program.Main(String[] args)

Exception 2:

at ConsoleAppBasics.Program.ThrowException2()
at ConsoleAppBasics.Program.Main(String[] args)

Is it maintains the original stackTrace in debug mode only?


Yes, there is a difference.

  • throw ex resets the stack trace (so your errors would appear to originate from HandleException)

  • throw doesn't - the original offender would be preserved.

     static void Main(string[] args)
     {
         try
         {
             Method2();
         }
         catch (Exception ex)
         {
             Console.Write(ex.StackTrace.ToString());
             Console.ReadKey();
         }
     }
    
     private static void Method2()
     {
         try
         {
             Method1();
         }
         catch (Exception ex)
         {
             //throw ex resets the stack trace Coming from Method 1 and propogates it to the caller(Main)
             throw ex;
         }
     }
    
     private static void Method1()
     {
         try
         {
             throw new Exception("Inside Method1");
         }
         catch (Exception)
         {
             throw;
         }
     }