If no information about the potentially thrown exceptions by a method is available the assumption is made that the methods are (at least) throw those exceptions that are explicitly handled by the calling method.
If no explicit information about the thrown exceptions by a method is available the assumption is made that the called method may throw any exception.
Only those exceptions are considered to be thrown by a method which are explicitly known to be potentially raised by the called method.
Only those exceptions are considered to be thrown by a method which are explicitly known to be potentially raised by the called method. This may include exceptions that are not explicitly handled by the calling method. However, if no explicit information is available, then no exceptions will be thrown.
Enumeration of how method calls are treated when the set of exceptions thrown by the target method is not completely known.