Repeat Try/Catch loop?

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Tom
Tom on 22 Jul 2013
Edited: Voss on 28 Mar 2024 at 21:44
I have code that sometimes results in an error, and sometimes not. I'd like to have the code run, and then if an error occurs try again until there is no error. Could this be done using a try/catch loop? I.e. the catch statement would tell the program to repeat the try statements? I'm not sure how to implement this.
Thanks!

Accepted Answer

Evan
Evan on 22 Jul 2013
Edited: Evan on 22 Jul 2013
You could embed your try/catch statements in a while loop, then check a condition at the beginning each iteration to see if the previous iteration ended in an error.
This could either be done through dealing with the MException object itself or just through setting a counter both inside the catch portion and outside the try/catch statement. When the two counters don't match up, you know that you have just had a successful run.
count = 0;
err_count = 0;
while count == err_count
try
i = randi(9);
if i ~= 7
error
end
catch MyErr
err_count = err_count + 1;
end
count = count + 1;
end
  3 Comments
DGM
DGM on 28 Mar 2024 at 21:34
Edited: DGM on 28 Mar 2024 at 21:35
Here's an idea, though I don't really know why a while loop couldn't be used.
maxtries = 20;
failcount = 0;
for k = 1:maxtries
try
sometimeserror(0.8);
break;
catch
failcount = failcount + 1;
end
end
function sometimeserror(p)
% p is the probability of error
if rand() < p
error('oh gosh i''m so sorry. my bad.');
end
end
Voss
Voss on 28 Mar 2024 at 21:38
Edited: Voss on 28 Mar 2024 at 21:44
count = 0;
err_count = 0;
max_n_tries = 10; % max number of tries
success = false;
for jj = 1:max_n_tries
try
i = randi(9);
if i ~= 7
error
end
catch MyErr
err_count = err_count + 1;
end
count = count + 1;
if count ~= err_count
% stop looping as soon as count ~= err_count
success = true;
break
end
end
Or, an alternate while loop:
while true
try
% something that might throw an error
break
end
end

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More Answers (1)

Daniel Shub
Daniel Shub on 22 Jul 2013
Edited: Daniel Shub on 22 Jul 2013
You could do something like
function varargout = myfunc(varargin)
try
thingThatSometimesCrashes;
catch
[vargout{1:nargout}] = myfunc(varargin{:})
end
end
This is a recursive loop. If thingThatSometimesCrashes crashes too many times in a row, the function will exceed the recursion limit and still crash. You could instead do a loop with a flag
function varargout = myfunc(varargin)
myflag = true;
while myflag
try
thingThatSometimesCrashes;
myflag = false;
end
end
end

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