Comment by cpgxiii
2 days ago
> If you std::abort(), you'll get a useful stack trace in the core dump. If you crash from an unhandled exception, you don't. That's a pretty huge difference and is one of the reasons exceptions suck.
All of this is up to the implementation in practice. The codebases I work on generally follow the pattern that exceptions may be thrown but may not be caught*, and thus they practically serve as terminate. And we absolutely get stack traces in our core dumps (Linux, both GCC and clang), and basically all of the complex debugging I do starts with a coredump stacktrace.
* We follow this pattern for a few reasons, (1) it is generally safer for us to assume that libraries we consume (STL included) will behave as expected with exceptions enabled, (2) "don't catch exceptions" (or if you must, catch the as close-to-throw as possible) is a simple way to avoid exceptions-for-nonexceptional-cases control flow, and (3) most of the C++ codebase is exposed through bindings in Python, and propagating errors as exceptions is the only Python-friendly way to handle it.
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