Create custom error types in node.js (exclusive) with meaningful messages and easy inheritance.
CustomError
DO NOT inherits from standard Error
, but behaves like it, including proper stack traces and proper formatting when used in console.log
. See more below.
Returns constructor of new error type. This new constructor prototypicaly inherits from CustomError. CustomError can not be invoked with new
directly.
Appends causeError.message
to your error instance message. Stores causeError
under CustomError#cause
property. See example.
Used internally to format error message. It can be overloaded to implement custom error message formatting. See examples.
Creates new error type like CustomError.create
, but also sets it as global available identifer (using global namespace
). It also checks if type identifier is available and will throw if such name is already taken.
You probably don't want register any globals in libriaries that are supposed to be used by others, but in applications code, you don't want require
say InternalError
or simillar error type everywhere.
const CustomError = require('@mprokopowicz/custom-error');
const MyCustomError = CustomError.create('MyCustomError');
try {
throw new MyCustomError('Ooops!');
} catch (error) {
if (error instanceof MyCustomError) {
//handle the error type you want
} else {
//throw, log or whatever any other error types
}
}
You can pass default message to CustomError.create(type, defaultMessage)
as 2nd argument:
const ErrorWithDefaultMessage = CustomError.create('MyCustomError', 'oh my!');
const ErrorWithoutDefaultMessage = CustomError.create('MyCustomError');
new ErrorWithDefaultMessage().message; // 'oh my!'
new ErrorWithDefaultMessage('my message').message; // 'my message'
new ErrorWithoutDefaultMessage().message; // ''
new ErrorWithoutDefaultMessage('custom message').message; // 'custom message'
Messages are formated using util.format:
const MyErrorType = CustomError.create('MyErrorType', '%d + %d = %d', 2, 3, 5);
new MyErrorType().message; // '2 + 3 = 5'
new MyErrorType('num=%d, obj=%j', 2, {foo: 'bar'}).message; // 'num=2, obj={"foo":"bar"}'
Every CustomError
instance has causedBy(error)
method, that returns self instace. It appends cause error message to your error message and saves cause error under cause
property of your error:
const ReadConfigError = CustomError.create('ReadConfigError', 'failed to read config file');
readConfig('non-existing.json', function(error) {
console.log(error.message); //failed to read config file << ENOENT: no such file or directory, open 'non-existing.json'
});
readConfig('invalid.json', function(error) {
console.log(error.message); //failed to read config file << Unexpected end of JSON input
});
function readConfig(configFilePath, callback) {
fs.readFile(configFilePath, function(readFileError, fileContent) {
if (readFileError) {
callback(new ReadConfigError().causedBy(readFileError));
} else {
try {
callback(JSON.parse(fileContent));
} catch (jsonError) {
callback(new ReadConfigError().causedBy(jsonError));
}
}
});
}
If you need to be very precise about handling potential errors you can create child error types:
const CustomError = require('./lib/custom-error');
const fs = require('fs');
const ReadConfigError = CustomError.create('ReadConfigError', 'failed to read config file');
/* note .create(...) is called below on ReadConfigError, not CustomError */
const ConfigFileNotFoundError = ReadConfigError.create('ConfigFileNotFoundError')
const ConfigFileSyntaxError = ReadConfigError.create('ConfigFileSyntaxError');
new ConfigFileNotFoundError() instanceof ReadConfigError; //true
new ConfigFileSyntaxError() instanceof ReadConfigError; //true
readConfig('config.json', function(error) {
if (error) {
if (error instanceof ConfigFileSyntaxError) {
console.log('Check your config file syntax!');
} else if (ReadConfigError) {
console.log('general readConfig error!', error.message);
} else {
throw error; //unexpected exception
}
}
});
function readConfig(configFilePath, callback) {
fs.readFile(configFilePath, function(readFileError, fileContent) {
if (readFileError) {
callback(new ConfigFileNotFoundError().causedBy(readFileError));
} else {
try {
callback(JSON.parse(fileContent));
} catch (jsonError) {
callback(new ConfigFileSyntaxError().causedBy(jsonError));
}
}
});
}
You may sometimes need to apply some advnaced message formatting, eg. create readable error message from array of validation errors. To do so, you should overload CustomError.formatMessage
method:
let validationResults = [{
path: 'foo.bar',
keyword: 'required',
message: 'bar is required',
input: null
}, {
path: 'bar.foo',
keyword: 'min',
message: 'foo should be greater than 10'
}];
//ES6 way
class ValidationError extends CustomError {
formatMessage(validationResults) {
return validationResults
.map((validationResults) => `${validationResults.path}: ${validationResults.message}`)
.join(', ');
}
}
console.log(new ValidationError(validationResults).message);
// 'foo.bar: bar is required, bar.foo: foo should be greater than 10'
//ES5 way
function ValidationError(validationResults) {
CustomError.call(this, validationResults);
}
ValidationError.prototype = Object.create(CustomError.prototype);
ValidationError.prototype.constructor = ValidationError;
ValidationError.prototype.formatMessage = function(validationResults) {
return validationResults.map(function(validationResult) {
return validationResult.path + ': ' + validationResult.message;
}).join(', ');
};
console.log(new ValidationError(validationResults).message);
// 'foo.bar: bar is required, bar.foo: foo should be greater than 10'
$ npm install --save @mprokopowicz/custom-error
var CustomError = require('@mprokopowicz/custom-error'); //es5
const CustomError = require('@mprokopowicz/custom-error'); //es6
Standard Error
may be throwed under many unpredictable circumstances including typos, undefined references etc. In such cases your program should crash as soon as possible and you should fix your bug. By testing if error
you're about to catch is instance of CustomError
, not Error
you can avoid accidently catching and eventually supressing/ignoring generic Error
, TypeError
etc.
try {
someObject.doSonethingThatThrows();
} catch (error) {
if (error instanceof Error) {
console.log('failed to do something!');
}
}
In given example you may suppose that it is some error throwed by doSomethingThatThrows
, but there is a typo in there (something vs sonething).
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