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ThreadDeath.java
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1997-08-30
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/*
* @(#)ThreadDeath.java 1.7 97/01/20
*
* Copyright (c) 1995, 1996 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
*
* This software is the confidential and proprietary information of Sun
* Microsystems, Inc. ("Confidential Information"). You shall not
* disclose such Confidential Information and shall use it only in
* accordance with the terms of the license agreement you entered into
* with Sun.
*
* SUN MAKES NO REPRESENTATIONS OR WARRANTIES ABOUT THE SUITABILITY OF THE
* SOFTWARE, EITHER EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE
* IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR
* PURPOSE, OR NON-INFRINGEMENT. SUN SHALL NOT BE LIABLE FOR ANY DAMAGES
* SUFFERED BY LICENSEE AS A RESULT OF USING, MODIFYING OR DISTRIBUTING
* THIS SOFTWARE OR ITS DERIVATIVES.
*
* CopyrightVersion 1.1_beta
*
*/
package java.lang;
/**
* An instance of <code>ThreadDeath</code> is thrown in the victim
* thread when the <code>stop</code> method with zero arguments in
* class <code>Thread</code> is called.
* <p>
* An application should catch instances of this class only if it
* must clean up after being terminated asynchronously. If
* <code>ThreadDeath</code> is caught by a method, it is important
* that it be rethrown so that the thread actually dies.
* <p>
* The top-level error handler does not print out a message if
* <code>ThreadDeath</code> is never caught.
* <p>
* The class <code>ThreadDeath</code> is specifically a subclass of
* <code>Error</code> rather than <code>Exception</code>, even though
* it is a "normal occurrence", because many applications
* catch all occurrences of <code>Exception</code> and then discard
* the exception.
*
* @author unascribed
* @version 1.7, 01/20/97
* @see java.lang.Thread#stop()
* @since JDK1.0
*/
public class ThreadDeath extends Error {}