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@StandardException was introduced as an experimental feature in lombok v1.18.21.

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Put this annotation on your own exception types (new classes that extends Exception or anything else that inherits from Throwable). This annotation will then generate up to 4 constructors:

Each constructor forwards to the full constructor; you can write any or all of these constructors manually in which case lombok will not generate it. The full constructor, if it needs to be generated, will invoke super(message); and will then invoke super.initCause(cause); if the cause is not null.

There are few reasons not to put this annotation on all your custom exceptions.

<@f.snippets name="StandardException" /> <@f.confKeys>
lombok.standardException.addConstructorProperties = [true | false] (default: false)
lombok.standardException.flagUsage = [warning | error] (default: not set)
Lombok will flag any usage of @StandardException as a warning or error if configured.
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Lombok will not check if you extend an actual exception type.

Lombok does not require that the class you inherit from has the Throwable cause variants, because not all exceptions have these. However, the `Parent(String message)` constructor as well as the no-args constructor must exist.

There is a very slight functional difference: Normally, invoking new SomeException(message, null) will initialize the cause to be no cause, and this cannot be later changed by invoking initCause. However, lombok's standard exceptions do let you overwrite an explicit no-cause with initCause later.

A second slight functional difference: Normally, invoking new SomeException(cause), if implemented as super(cause);, will set the message to be equal to the message of the cause. However, lombok does not do this - it leaves the exception as having no message at all. We think inheriting the message is fundamentally wrong - messages are not guaranteed to be sensible in the absence of the context of the exception-type. The cause ought to be listed anywhere where it is relevant; if you are using messages as direct user feedback (which is rare, in the java community), @StandardException can't really help you anyway; the infrastructure of e.g. getLocalizedMessage() is too complicated.