defekt
defekt is custom errors made simple.
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Installation
$ npm install defekt
Quick start
First you need to add a reference to defekt in your application:
const { defekt } = require('defekt');
If you use TypeScript, use the following code instead:
import { defekt } from 'defekt';
Then call the defekt
function and hand over an object of custom error configurations that you would like to have created. In this object each key is the name for an error and the corresponding value is the error's configuration.
const errors = defekt({
ArgumentNull: {},
InvalidOperation: {},
});
The result is an object containing all the errors you specified. To use one of those errors, simply call the appropriate function with new
and throw it:
throw new errors.InvalidOperation();
By default, the error name is also used as the error message, but converted to a human readable form. E.g., the error name InvalidOperation
becomes the message Invalid operation.
:
try {
throw new errors.InvalidOperation();
} catch (ex) {
console.log(ex.message);
}
If you want to specify a custom message, feel free to do so:
throw new errors.InvalidOperation('Something failed.');
Additionally, if an error was caused by another error, you can specify this error using the cause
property:
throw new errors.InvalidOperation('Something failed.', {
cause: new Error(...)
});
From time to time, you may need to provide additional data for an error. For this, you can use the data
property:
throw new errors.InvalidOperation('Something failed.', {
data: { ... }
});
The custom errors follow the same rules as the built-in ones, i.e. they have a name
and a message
property, they derive from Error
and they can be recognized by the util.isError
function.
Defining error codes
By default, each custom error uses its uppercased name with an E
prefix as error code. E.g., an InvalidOperation
error uses EINVALIDOPERATION
as its code.
From time to time, you may want to provide custom error codes. For that specify a code
property on the configuration object:
const errors = defekt({
ArgumentNull: { code: 'ARGNULL' },
InvalidOperation: { code: 'INVALOP' }
});
Grouping errors
Over time you may get more and more error definitions, which results in a lengthy errors
object. To group errors, add appropriate properties to the errors
object and call the defekt
function multiple times:
const errors = {
common: defekt({
ArgumentNull: {},
InvalidOperation: {}
}),
http: defekt({
BadRequest: {}
})
};
Comparing errors
To tell your errors apart, you sometimes want to compare them – usually based on their error code. To prevent you from using magic strings all over your application, you can use the static code
property on the error constructors:
const errors = defekt({
ArgumentNull: {},
InvalidOperation: {}
});
const error = new errors.InvalidOperation();
if (error.code === errors.InvalidOperation.code) {
}
Alternatively, if you catch an error from somewhere and there are multiple options, you can use the error codes in a switch
statement:
try {
} catch (ex) {
switch (ex.code) {
case errors.ArgumentNull.code: {
break;
}
case errors.InvalidOperation.code: {
break;
}
default: {
throw ex;
}
}
}
Recognizing CustomError
s
Since version 4.0 TypeScript allows unknown
on catch
clause bindings. Typing exceptions as unknown
reduces the assumptions made about their content and forces you to examine your exceptions more closely when handling them. defekt
provides a type predicate to check for CustomError
s:
import { isCustomError } from 'defekt';
try {
} catch (ex: unknown) {
if (isCustomError(ex)) {
switch (ex.code) {
}
}
}
Running quality assurance
To run quality assurance for this module use roboter:
$ npx roboter