until
Gracefully handle a Promise using async
/await
.
Why?
With the addition of async
/await
keywords in ECMAScript 2017 the handling of Promises became much easier. However, one must keep in mind that the await
keyword provides no standard error handling API. Consider this usage:
function getUser(id) {
const data = await fetchUser(id)
}
In case fetchUser()
throws an error, the entire getUser()
function's scope will terminate. Because of this, it's recommended to implement error handling using try
/catch
block wrapping await
expressions:
function getUser(id)
let data = null
try {
data = await asyncAction()
} catch (error) {
console.error(error)
}
}
While this is a semantically valid approach, constructing try
/catch
around each awaited operation may be tedious and get overlooked at times. Such error handling also introduces separate closures for execution and error scenarios of an asynchronous operation.
This library encapsulates the try
/catch
error handling in a utility function that does not create a separate closure and exposes a NodeJS-friendly API to work with errors and resolved data.
Getting started
Install
npm install @open-draft/until
Usage
import { until } from '@open-draft/until'
async function(id) {
const { error, data } = await until(() => fetchUser(id))
if (error) {
return handleError(error)
}
return data
}
Usage with TypeScript
import { until } from '@open-draft/until'
interface User {
firstName: string
age: number
}
interface UserFetchError {
type: 'FORBIDDEN' | 'NOT_FOUND'
message?: string
}
async function(id: string) {
const { error, data } = await until<UserFetchError, User>(() => fetchUser(id))
if (error) {
handleError(error.type, error.message)
}
return data.firstName
}
Frequently asked questions
Why does until
accept a function and not a Promise
directly?
This has been intentionally introduced to await a single logical unit as opposed to a single Promise
.
const { error, data } = until(async () => {
const user = await fetchUser()
const nextUser = normalizeUser(user)
const transaction = await saveModel('user', user)
invariant(transaction.status === 'OK', 'Saving user failed')
return transaction.result
})
if (error) {
}
Why does until
return an object and not an array?
The until
function used to return an array of shape [error, data]
prior to 2.0.0
. That has been changed, however, to get proper type-safety using discriminated union type.
Compare these two examples:
const [error, data] = await until(() => action())
if (error) {
return null
}
console.log(data)
const result = await until(() => action())
if (result.error) {
return null
}
console.log(result.data)
It's crucial to keep the entire result of the Promise
in a single variable and not destructure it. TypeScript will always keep the type of error
and data
as it was upon destructuring, ignoring any type guards you may perform later on.
Special thanks