node caught
![License](https://img.shields.io/npm/l/caught.svg)
This module lets you attach empty rejcetion handlers to promises
to avoid certain warnings that will be fatal errors
in next versions of Node.
Since version 0.1.0 it supports TypeScript
thanks to Wil Lee.
For a version for Deno,
see: https://deno.land/x/caught
More info
Doing something like this:
var p = Promise.reject(0);
setTimeout(() => p.catch(e => console.error('caught')), 0);
will generate a lot of helpful warnings:
(node:13548) UnhandledPromiseRejectionWarning: Unhandled promise rejection (rejection id: 1): 0
(node:13548) DeprecationWarning: Unhandled promise rejections are deprecated. In the future, promise rejections that are not handled will terminate the Node.js process with a non-zero exit code.
(node:13548) PromiseRejectionHandledWarning: Promise rejection was handled asynchronously (rejection id: 1)
This module lets you write:
var p = caught(Promise.reject(0));
setTimeout(() => p.catch(e => console.error('caught')), 0);
to ignore those warnings on a per-promise basis.
Use at your own risk.
Background
For more info see this answer on Stack Overflow:
Installation
To use in your projects:
npm install caught --save
Usage
var caught = require('caught');
var p = caught(Promise.reject(0));
Note that it is not the same as writing:
var p = Promise.reject(0).catch(() => {});
which would not return the original promise and wouldn't let you add catch
handlers later.
Issues
For any bug reports or feature requests please
post an issue on GitHub.
Author
Rafał Pocztarski
![Follow on Stack Exchange](https://stackexchange.com/users/flair/303952.png)
Contributors
License
MIT License (Expat). See LICENSE.md for details.