JavaTM 2 Platform
Std. Ed. v1.3.1

Uses of Class
java.lang.Error

Packages that use Error
java.awt Contains all of the classes for creating user interfaces and for painting graphics and images. 
java.lang Provides classes that are fundamental to the design of the Java programming language. 
java.rmi Provides the RMI package. 
 

Uses of Error in java.awt
 

Subclasses of Error in java.awt
 class AWTError
          Thrown when a serious Abstract Window Toolkit error has occurred.
 

Uses of Error in java.lang
 

Subclasses of Error in java.lang
 class AbstractMethodError
          Thrown when an application tries to call an abstract method.
 class ClassCircularityError
          Thrown when a circularity has been detected while initializing a class.
 class ClassFormatError
          Thrown when the Java Virtual Machine attempts to read a class file and determines that the file is malformed or otherwise cannot be interpreted as a class file.
 class ExceptionInInitializerError
          Signals that an unexpected exception has occurred in a static initializer.
 class IllegalAccessError
          Thrown if an application attempts to access or modify a field, or to call a method that it does not have access to.
 class IncompatibleClassChangeError
          Thrown when an incompatible class change has occurred to some class definition.
 class InstantiationError
          Thrown when an application tries to use the Java new construct to instantiate an abstract class or an interface.
 class InternalError
          Thrown to indicate some unexpected internal error has occurred in the Java Virtual Machine.
 class LinkageError
          Subclasses of LinkageError indicate that a class has some dependency on another class; however, the latter class has incompatibly changed after the compilation of the former class.
 class NoClassDefFoundError
          Thrown if the Java Virtual Machine or a classloader tries to load in the definition of a class (as part of a normal method call or as part of creating a new instance using the new expression) and no definition of the class could be found.
 class NoSuchFieldError
          Thrown if an application tries to access or modify a specified field of an object, and that object no longer has that field.
 class NoSuchMethodError
          Thrown if an application tries to call a specified method of a class (either static or instance), and that class no longer has a definition of that method.
 class OutOfMemoryError
          Thrown when the Java Virtual Machine cannot allocate an object because it is out of memory, and no more memory could be made available by the garbage collector.
 class StackOverflowError
          Thrown when a stack overflow occurs because an application recurses too deeply.
 class ThreadDeath
          An instance of ThreadDeath is thrown in the victim thread when the stop method with zero arguments in class Thread is called.
 class UnknownError
          Thrown when an unknown but serious exception has occurred in the Java Virtual Machine.
 class UnsatisfiedLinkError
          Thrown if the Java Virtual Machine cannot find an appropriate native-language definition of a method declared native.
 class UnsupportedClassVersionError
          Thrown when the Java Virtual Machine attempts to read a class file and determines that the major and minor version numbers in the file are not supported.
 class VerifyError
          Thrown when the "verifier" detects that a class file, though well formed, contains some sort of internal inconsistency or security problem.
 class VirtualMachineError
          Thrown to indicate that the Java Virtual Machine is broken or has run out of resources necessary for it to continue operating.
 

Uses of Error in java.rmi
 

Constructors in java.rmi with parameters of type Error
ServerError(String s, Error err)
          Constructs a ServerError with the specified detail message and nested error.
 


JavaTM 2 Platform
Std. Ed. v1.3.1

Submit a bug or feature
For further API reference and developer documentation, see Java 2 SDK SE Developer Documentation. That documentation contains more detailed, developer-targeted descriptions, with conceptual overviews, definitions of terms, workarounds, and working code examples.

Java, Java 2D, and JDBC are trademarks or registered trademarks of Oracle and/or its affiliates, in the US and other countries.
Copyright © 1995, 2010 Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.