> “Zero cost” EH is also *extremely* expensive in the case where an error is 
> actually throw in normal use cases.  This makes it completely inappropriate 
> for use in APIs where errors are expected in edge cases (e.g. file not found 
> errors).

Anecdote: I work with a web service that gets several million hits a day. 
Management loves to use the percentage of succeeding web requests as a measure 
of overall health. The problem with that metric is that when a web request 
fails, clients fall in an unhealthy state and stop issuing requests for a 
while. Therefore, one failing request prevents maybe twenty more that would all 
have failed if the client hadn't bailed out, but these don't show in 
statistics. This makes us look much better than we actually are.

If I had any amount of experience with DTrace, I'd write a script that logs 
syscall errors to try and see how the programs that I use react to failures. 
I'm almost certain that when one thing stops working, most programs backs out 
of a much bigger process and don't retry right away. When a program fails to 
open a file, it's also failing to read/write to it, or whatever else people 
normally do after they open files. These things are also expensive, and they're 
rarely the type of things that you need to (or even just can) retry in a tight 
loop. My perception is that the immediate cost of failing, even with expensive 
throwing, is generally dwarfed by the immediate cost of succeeding, so we're 
not necessarily losing out on much.

And if that isn't the case, there are alternatives to throwing that people are 
already embracing, to the point where error handling practices seem fractured.

>> I don't really know what to expect in terms of discussion, especially since 
>> it may boil down to "we're experts in this fields and you're just peasants”
> 
> I’m not sure why you think the Swift team would say something that 
> derogatory.  I hope there is no specific action that has led to this belief. 
> If there is, then please let me know.

Of course not. All of you have been very nice and patient with us peasants, at 
least as far as "us" includes me. :) This was meant as a light-hearted 
reflection on discussing intimate parts of the language, where my best 
perspective is probably well-understood desktop/server development, whereas the 
core team has to see that but also needs a high focus on other things that 
don't even cross my mind (or at least, that's the heroic picture I have of you 
guys).

For instance, my "expensive" stops at "takes a while". Your "expensive" might 
mean "takes a while and drains the very finite energy reserves that we have on 
this tiny device" or something still more expansive. These differences are not 
always immediately obvious.

>>  However, as linked above, someone did for Microsoft platforms (for 
>> Microsoft-platform-style errors) and found that there is an impact. 
> 
> C++ and Swift are completely different languages in this respect, so the 
> analysis doesn’t translate over.

The analysis was (probably?) done over C++ and HRESULTs but with the intention 
of applying it to another language (Midori), and it most likely validated the 
approach of other languages (essentially everything .NET-based). Several 
findings of the Midori team are being exported to Microsoft's new APIs, notably 
the async everywhere and exceptions everywhere paradigms, and these APIs are 
callable from both so-called managed programs (GCed) and unmanaged programs 
(ref-counted).

Swift operations don't tend to throw very much, which is a net positive, but it 
seems to me that comparing the impact of Swift throws with another language's 
throws is relatively fair. C# isn't shy of FileNotFoundExceptions, for instance.

> Yes, and many C++ projects build with -fno-exceptions because of the huge 
> code and metadata bloat associated with them.  This is one of many mistakes 
> in C++/Java/etc that we do not want to repeat with Swift.  Additionally, 
> unlike Java, Swift doesn’t generally have the benefit of a JIT compiler that 
> can lazily create these structures on demand.

Yes. I believe that you are familiar with a couple of such C++ projects. :)

As we've seemingly agreed, Swift only needs metadata and code for functions 
that call functions that throw. Also, I understand that we don't need EH tables 
with the current approach, but my understanding is that the cleanup code needs 
to exist regardless of how control is transferred to it. (I have no notion of 
how big EH table entries have to be, so I won't attempt any comparison with the 
size of the equivalent dispatch code. I'm pretty sure that it's unfavorable.)

All in all, I guess that this is an area of Swift that goes against trends that 
are overall satisfying in my domain. Of course, I'm writing all of this because 
I like Swift and I want an ABI that will make it the best choice (or close) for 
the things that I want to do with it. I'm a little concerned that what's best 
for a watch isn't necessarily what's best for a server and that what's best for 
a compiler back-end isn't necessarily what's best for a UI program, but Swift 
tries position itself for all of these.

Félix

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