Exceptions provide a convenient way to program error and error-recovery mechanisms, and are closely related to classes. Exception support is based on three constructs:
Raise
statements. To raise an exception. This is usually done to signal an error condition. It is however also usable to abort execution and immediately return to a well-known point in the executable.
Try ... Except
blocks. These block serve to catch exceptions raised within the scope of the block, and to provide exception-recovery code.
Try ... Finally
blocks. These block serve to force code to be executed irrespective of an exception occurrence or not. They generally serve to clean up memory or close files in case an exception occurs. The compiler generates many implicit Try ... Finally blocks around procedure, to force memory consistency.
Remark Because exceptions use classes, you need one of the object pascal modes to be able to use them:
{$MODE OBJFPC}
Or
{$MODE DELPHI}