On May 23, 7:11 am, Erwin <[email protected]> wrote:
> Thanks Fred
>
> I believe I can pass parameters to the Exception class for fine grain
> processing
> will read more about it ..  any better link than Rials doc ,
>
You probably want some pure ruby documentation - this isn't rails
specific at all.
Your subclasses of StandardError can store as many extra bits of
information about the error that occurred as you want - just override
the initialize method to stash the information in an instance variable
or something like that

Fred

> On 22 mai, 19:06, Frederick Cheung <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > On May 22, 4:36 pm, Erwin <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > I a using delayed_job,  and I am raising an exception this way :
>
> > > config/initializers/custom_exceptions.rb
> > >    class RemoteLockerException < StandardError; end
> > >    class RemoteLockerDenied < StandardError; end
>
> > This should define just RemoteLockerDenied, not
> > Exceptions::RemoteLockerDenied.
>
> > > there is a hook for any exception raised, to trap ALL the errors
> > > and do something according to the raised exception , i.e. :
>
> > >     def error(job, exception)
> > >       case exception
> > >       when "RemoteContainerDenied"
> > >         .. do something
> > >       when "RemoteContainerException"
> > >         .. do something else ......
> > >       end
> > >     end
>
> > Your whens should use the exception class, not the name, ie
>
> > when RemoteLockerDenied instead of when 'RemoteLockerDenied'
>
> > Fred

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