Superfluous exceptions within throws clauses have negative effects on the readability and maintainability of the code. An exception in
a throws clause is superfluous if it is:
  -  listed multiple times 
-  a subclass of another listed exception 
-  not actually thrown by any execution path of the method 
Noncompliant code example
void foo() throws MyException, MyException {}  // Noncompliant; should be listed once
void bar() throws Throwable, Exception {}  // Noncompliant; Exception is a subclass of Throwable
void boo() throws IOException { // Noncompliant; IOException cannot be thrown
  System.out.println("Hi!");
}
Compliant solution
void foo() throws MyException {}
void bar() throws Throwable {}
void boo() {
  System.out.println("Hi!");
}
Exceptions
The rule will not raise any issue for exceptions that cannot be thrown from the method body:
  -  in interface defaultmethods
-  in overriding and implementating methods 
-  in non-private methods that only throw, have empty bodies, or a single return statement.
-  in overridable methods (non-final, or not member of a final class, non-static, non-private), if the exception is documented with a proper
  JavaDoc 
interface MyInterface {
  default void defaultMethod() throws IOException {
    System.out.println("Hi!");
  }
  void doSomething() throws IOException;
}
class A implements MyInterface {
  @Override
  void doSomething() throws IOException {
    System.out.println("Hi!");
  }
  public void emptyBody() throws IOException {}
  protected void singleThrowStatement() throws IOException {
    throw new UnsupportedOperationException("This method should be implemented in subclasses");
  }
  Object singleReturnStatement() throws IOException {
    return null;
  }
  /**
   * @throws IOException Overriding classes may throw this exception if they print values into a file
   */
  protected void overridable() throws IOException { // no issue, method is overridable and the exception has proper javadoc
    System.out.println("foo");
  }
}
Also, the rule will not raise issues on RuntimeException, or one of its sub-classes, because documenting runtime exceptions which
could be thrown can ultimately help users of the method understand its behavior.
class B {
  int possibleDivisionByZero(int a, int b) throws ArithmeticException {
      return a / b;
  }
}