Let's say I create and execute a System.Net.FtpWebRequest
.
I can use catch (WebException ex) {}
to catch any web-related exception thrown by this request. But what if I have some logic that I only want to execute when the exception is thrown due to (550) file not found
?
What's the best way to do this? I could copy the exception message and test for equality:
const string fileNotFoundExceptionMessage =
"The remote server returned an error: (550) File unavailable (e.g., file not found, no access).";
if (ex.Message == fileNotFoundExceptionMessage) {
But theoretically it seems like this message could change down the road.
Or, I could just test to see if the exception message contains "550". This approach is probably more likely to work if the message is changed (it will likely still contain "550" somewhere in the text). But of course such a test would also return true if the text for some other WebException
just happens to contain "550".
There doesn't seem to be a method for accessing just the number of the exception. Is this possible?
WebException
exposes aStatusCode
property that you can check.If you want the actual HTTP response code you can do something like this:
For reference, here's the actual code I ended up using:
Declare a WebException object, casting the ex value from your Catch block to it. Then you can check the StatusCode Property.