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In languages with implicit construction/destruction facility, like C++, you'd probably live happily without the finally block. There are however situations in C++ when you want to create a class with ctor/dtor only to make sure some block is executed when going out of scope, no matter how. That dtor would be your finally block.


  ctor
  try {
    dostuff
  } catch 1 {
    blahblah
  } catch 2 {
    aoeuaoeuaoeu
  } finally {
    dtor
  }
  //why not put the dtor here and just leave off the finally block completely?


Indeed - once I discovered __del__ in Python, I immediately started to do it that way instead.




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