public class ThreadDeath extends Error
ThreadDeath is thrown in the victim thread
 when the (deprecated) Thread.stop() method is invoked.
 An application should catch instances of this class only if it
 must clean up after being terminated asynchronously.  If
 ThreadDeath is caught by a method, it is important that it
 be rethrown so that the thread actually dies.
 
The top-level error
 handler does not print out a message if ThreadDeath is
 never caught.
 
The class ThreadDeath is specifically a subclass of
 Error rather than Exception, even though it is a
 "normal occurrence", because many applications catch all
 occurrences of Exception and then discard the exception.
| Constructor and Description | 
|---|
| ThreadDeath() | 
addSuppressed, fillInStackTrace, getCause, getLocalizedMessage, getMessage, getStackTrace, getSuppressed, initCause, printStackTrace, printStackTrace, printStackTrace, setStackTrace, toString Submit a bug or feature 
For further API reference and developer documentation, see Java SE Documentation. That documentation contains more detailed, developer-targeted descriptions, with conceptual overviews, definitions of terms, workarounds, and working code examples.
 Copyright © 1993, 2015, Oracle and/or its affiliates.  All rights reserved.