The catch{} blocks are in a correct order,
because ArithmeticException is not
an ancestor nor a descendant of InputMismatchException.
Reversing the order of the two blocks would also work.
In the example program,
the try{} block
might throw 
a NumberFormatException,
or 
an ArithmeticException.
  public static void main ( String[] a ) 
     . . . .
    try
    {
      System.out.print("Enter the numerator: ");
      num = scan.nextInt();
      System.out.print("Enter the divisor  : ");
      div = scan.nextInt();
      System.out.println( num + " / " + div + " is " + (num/div) + " rem " + (num%div) );
    }
    catch (InputMismatchException ex )
    {
      . . .
    }
    catch (ArithmeticException ex )
    {
      . . .
    }
  }
A NumberFormatException might occur in either call to
nextInt().
The first catch{} block is for this type of exception.
An ArithmeticException might occur if the user enters
data that can't be used in an integer division.
The second a catch{} block is for this type of exception.
What type of exception is thrown if the user enters a 0 for the divisor?