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One of the most useful aspects of unstructured exception handling is the Resume statement, which lets you resume program execution even after an exception has occurred. You can use Resume to resume execution with the statement that caused the exception, Resume Next to resume execution with the statement after the one that caused the exception, and Resume line, where line is a line number or label that specifies where to resume execution. Here's an example using Resume Next, which lets you skip over the line that caused the problem:
Module Module1 Sub Main() Dim int1 = 0, int2 = 1, int3 As Integer On Error Goto Handler int3 = int2 / int1 System.Console.WriteLine("Program completed...") Exit Sub Handler: If (TypeOf Err.GetException() Is OverflowException) Then System.Console.WriteLine("Overflow error!") Resume Next End If End Sub End Module
Here's what you see when you run this console application:
Overflow error! Program completed...
And here's an example using the Resume line form:
Module Module1 Sub Main() Dim int1 = 0, int2 = 1, int3 As Integer On Error Goto Handler int3 = int2 / int1 Nextline: System.Console.WriteLine("Program completed...") Exit Sub Handler: If (TypeOf Err.GetException() Is OverflowException) Then System.Console.WriteLine("Overflow error!") Resume Nextline End If End Sub End Module
You can also use an On Error Resume Next or On Error Resume line statement to make Visual Basic continue program execution after an exception has occurred. This form is sometimes preferable to the On Error GoTo form if you don't want to write an explicit exception handler:
Module Module1 Sub Main() Dim int1 = 0, int2 = 1, int3 As Integer On Error Resume Next int3 = int2 / int1 ⋮
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