652

I have read several articles on this subject, but it is still not clear to me if there is a difference between Promise.reject vs. throwing an error. For example,

Using Promise.reject

return asyncIsPermitted()
    .then(function(result) {
        if (result === true) {
            return true;
        }
        else {
            return Promise.reject(new PermissionDenied());
        }
    });

Using throw

return asyncIsPermitted()
    .then(function(result) {
        if (result === true) {
            return true;
        }
        else {
            throw new PermissionDenied();
        }
    });

My preference is to use throw simply because it is shorter, but was wondering if there is any advantage of one over the other.

15
  • 22
    Both methods produce the exact same response. The .then() handler catches the thrown exception and turns it into a rejected promise automatically. Since I've read that thrown exceptions are not particularly fast to execute, I would guess that returning the rejected promise might be slightly faster to execute, but you'd have to devise a test in multiple modern browsers if that was important to know. I personally use throw because I like the readability.
    – jfriend00
    Oct 30, 2015 at 22:11
  • 46
    One downside to throw is that it wouldn't result in a rejected promise if it was thrown from within an asynchronous callback, such as a setTimeout. jsfiddle.net/m07van33 @Blondie your answer was correct.
    – Kevin B
    Oct 30, 2015 at 22:24
  • 1
    @KevinB true. I think it is best to replace all async callbacks with Promises for that kind of reason. You can throw from a Promisified timeout: jsbin.com/mebogukele/edit?js,console
    – joews
    Oct 30, 2015 at 22:33
  • 1
    Ah, true. So a clarification to my comment would be, "if it was thrown from within an asynchronous callback that wasn't promisified". I knew there was an exception to that, i just couldn't remember what it was. I too prefer to use throw simply because i find it to be more readable, and allows me to omit reject it from my param list.
    – Kevin B
    Oct 30, 2015 at 22:35
  • 4
    Some of the answers seem to really be misunderstanding what the OP is asking. They are asking about the static method, Promise.reject, not the reject callback parameter that we commonly name that way. Jul 30, 2021 at 20:27

8 Answers 8

548

There is no advantage of using one vs the other, but, there is a specific case where throw won't work. However, those cases can be fixed.

Any time you are inside of a promise callback, you can use throw. However, if you're in any other asynchronous callback, you must use reject.

For example, this won't trigger the catch:

new Promise(function() {
  setTimeout(function() {
    throw 'or nah';
    // return Promise.reject('or nah'); also won't work
  }, 1000);
}).catch(function(e) {
  console.log(e); // doesn't happen
});

Instead you're left with an unresolved promise and an uncaught exception. That is a case where you would want to instead use reject. However, you could fix this in two ways.

  1. by using the original Promise's reject function inside the timeout:

new Promise(function(resolve, reject) {
  setTimeout(function() {
    reject('or nah');
  }, 1000);
}).catch(function(e) {
  console.log(e); // works!
});

  1. by promisifying the timeout:

function timeout(duration) { // Thanks joews
  return new Promise(function(resolve) {
    setTimeout(resolve, duration);
  });
}

timeout(1000).then(function() {
  throw 'worky!';
  // return Promise.reject('worky'); also works
}).catch(function(e) {
  console.log(e); // 'worky!'
});

28
  • 74
    Worth mentioning that the places inside a non-promisified async callback that you can't use throw error, you also can't use return Promise.reject(err) which is what the OP was asking us to compare. This is basically why you should not put async callbacks inside of promises. Promisify everything that's async and then you don't have these restrictions.
    – jfriend00
    Oct 30, 2015 at 23:00
  • 13
    "However, if you're in any other kind of callback" really should be "However, if you're in any other kind of asynchronous callback". Callbacks can be synchronous (e.g. with Array#forEach) and with those, throwing inside them would work. Feb 16, 2017 at 23:25
  • 3
    @KevinB reading these lines "there is a specific case where throw won't work." and "Any time you are inside of a promise callback, you can use throw. However, if you're in any other asynchronous callback, you must use reject." I get a feeling that the example snippets will show cases where throw will not work and instead Promise.reject is a better choice. However the snippets are unaffected with any of those two choices and give same result irrespective of what you choose. Am I missing something?
    – Anshul
    May 2, 2017 at 13:25
  • 2
    @KevinB What I meant was, for any of the snippets, it doesn't matter whether you are using throw or Promise.reject, you get exactly same behavior. For example Snippet 1, which doesn't catch the error, will not catch it irrespective of whether you used throw 'or nah' or did return Promise.reject('or nah').
    – Anshul
    May 3, 2017 at 13:31
  • 3
    yes. if you use throw in a setTimeout, the catch will not be called. you must use the reject that was passed to the new Promise(fn) callback.
    – Kevin B
    May 5, 2017 at 3:54
301

Another important fact is that reject() DOES NOT terminate control flow like a return statement does. In contrast throw does terminate control flow.

Example:

new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
  throw "err";
  console.log("NEVER REACHED");
})
.then(() => console.log("RESOLVED"))
.catch(() => console.log("REJECTED"));

vs

new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
  reject(); // resolve() behaves similarly
  console.log("ALWAYS REACHED"); // "REJECTED" will print AFTER this
})
.then(() => console.log("RESOLVED"))
.catch(() => console.log("REJECTED"));

5
  • 70
    Well the point is correct but the comparison is tricky. Because normally you should return your rejected promise by writing return reject(), so the next line won't run.
    – AZ.
    Jan 26, 2017 at 23:45
  • 13
    Why would you want to return it?
    – lukyer
    Jan 27, 2017 at 16:07
  • 46
    In this case, return reject() is simply a shorthand for reject(); return i.e. what you want is to terminate flow. The return value of the executor (the function passed to new Promise) is not used, so this is safe. Feb 16, 2017 at 23:19
  • 2
    This one tripped me up for a while. Is there any good reason that reject() does not terminate flow? It seems like it should.
    – 223seneca
    Mar 1, 2021 at 20:32
  • 3
    @223seneca reject is just a normal javascript function like any other, so it cannot terminate flow because functions in general should not be able to terminate their caller.
    – Katharsas
    Mar 25, 2021 at 12:57
79

Yes, the biggest difference is that reject is a callback function that gets carried out after the promise is rejected, whereas throw cannot be used asynchronously. If you chose to use reject, your code will continue to run normally in asynchronous fashion whereas throw will prioritize completing the resolver function (this function will run immediately).

An example I've seen that helped clarify the issue for me was that you could set a Timeout function with reject, for example:

new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
  setTimeout(()=>{reject('err msg');console.log('finished')}, 1000);
  return resolve('ret val')
})
.then((o) => console.log("RESOLVED", o))
.catch((o) => console.log("REJECTED", o));

The above could would not be possible to write with throw.

try{
  new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
    setTimeout(()=>{throw new Error('err msg')}, 1000);
    return resolve('ret val')
  })
  .then((o) => console.log("RESOLVED", o))
  .catch((o) => console.log("REJECTED", o));
}catch(o){
  console.log("IGNORED", o)
}

In the OP's small example the difference in indistinguishable but when dealing with more complicated asynchronous concept the difference between the two can be drastic.

5
  • 5
    This sounds like a key concept, but I don't understand it as written. Still too new to Promises, I guess. Dec 22, 2018 at 12:14
  • 4
    @DavidSpector - No, I'm really deeply familiar with promises and I'm struggling to understand what's being explained above, too. :-) Unless it's talking about the same thing Kevin B posted a little bit after the above. Certainly the stuff about "prioritizing" something is unclear. Blondie, do you want to clarify? Aug 12, 2020 at 8:41
  • This is not correct. throw new Error("o_O") is the same as reject(new Error("o_O")). Reference learn-javascript-ru.translate.goog/…
    – Ren
    Nov 9, 2021 at 10:27
  • 2
    The OP is NOT asking about the Promise constructor. He is asking about throwing an error inside a .then(). There's two ways to throw an error inside a .then() - using throw or return Promise.reject(). BOTH WORK SYNCHRONOUSLY
    – slebetman
    Dec 22, 2021 at 5:12
  • @slebetman I think his example used a then, but I don't think it has to. My understanding is that if an error bubbles up from an asynchronous callback, throw will cause the error to be handled even if a resolve is called before, but reject will ignore it. Make sure you are using the reject from the outside Promise, not the inside one.
    – Alaska
    Nov 26, 2022 at 0:30
62

TLDR: A function is hard to use when it sometimes returns a promise and sometimes throws an exception. When writing an async function, prefer to signal failure by returning a rejected promise

Your particular example obfuscates some important distinctions between them:

Because you are error handling inside a promise chain, thrown exceptions get automatically converted to rejected promises. This may explain why they seem to be interchangeable - they are not.

Consider the situation below:

checkCredentials = () => {
    let idToken = localStorage.getItem('some token');
    if ( idToken ) {
      return fetch(`https://someValidateEndpoint`, {
        headers: {
          Authorization: `Bearer ${idToken}`
        }
      })
    } else {
      throw new Error('No Token Found In Local Storage')
    }
  }

This would be an anti-pattern because you would then need to support both async and sync error cases. It might look something like:

try {
  function onFulfilled() { ... do the rest of your logic }
  function onRejected() { // handle async failure - like network timeout }
  checkCredentials(x).then(onFulfilled, onRejected);
} catch (e) {
  // Error('No Token Found In Local Storage')
  // handle synchronous failure
} 

Not good and here is exactly where Promise.reject ( available in the global scope ) comes to the rescue and effectively differentiates itself from throw. The refactor now becomes:

checkCredentials = () => {
  let idToken = localStorage.getItem('some_token');
  if (!idToken) {
    return Promise.reject('No Token Found In Local Storage')
  }
  return fetch(`https://someValidateEndpoint`, {
    headers: {
      Authorization: `Bearer ${idToken}`
    }
  })
}

This now lets you use just one catch() for network failures and the synchronous error check for lack of tokens:

checkCredentials()
      .catch((error) => if ( error == 'No Token' ) {
      // do no token modal
      } else if ( error === 400 ) {
      // do not authorized modal. etc.
      }
7
  • 5
    Op's example always returns a promise, however. The question is referring to whether you should use Promise.reject or throw when you want to return a rejected promise (a promise that will jump to the next .catch()). Oct 19, 2017 at 11:50
  • @maxwell - I like you example. In the same time if on the fetch you will add a catch and in it you throw the exception then you will be safe to use try ... catch... There is no perfect world on exception flow, but I think that using one single pattern makes sense, and combining the patterns is not safe (aligned with your pattern vs anti-pattern analogy).
    – user3053247
    Nov 6, 2017 at 0:12
  • 3
    Excellent answer but I find here a flaw - this pattern assume all errors are handled by returning a Promise.reject - what happens with all the unexpected errors that simply might be thrown from checkCredentials()?
    – chenop
    Sep 4, 2018 at 13:07
  • 1
    Yeah you're right @chenop - to catch those unexpected errors you would need to wrap in try/catch still
    – maxwell
    Sep 4, 2018 at 17:26
  • 2
    I don't understand @maxwell's case. Couldn't you just structure it so you do checkCredentials(x).then(onFulfilled).catch(e) {}, and have the catch handle both the rejection case and the thrown error case? Jul 8, 2019 at 15:12
17

There's one difference — which shouldn't matter — that the other answers haven't touched on, so:

If the fulfillment handler passed to then throws, the promise returned by that call to then is rejected with what was thrown.

If it returns a rejected promise, the promise returned by the call to then is resolved to that promise (and will ultimately be rejected, since the promise it's resolved to is rejected), which may introduce one extra async "tick" (one more loop in the microtask queue, to put it in browser terms).

Any code that relies on that difference is fundamentally broken, though. :-) It shouldn't be that sensitive to the timing of the promise settlement.

Here's an example:

function usingThrow(val) {
    return Promise.resolve(val)
        .then(v => {
            if (v !== 42) {
                throw new Error(`${v} is not 42!`);
            }
            return v;
        });
}
function usingReject(val) {
    return Promise.resolve(val)
        .then(v => {
            if (v !== 42) {
                return Promise.reject(new Error(`${v} is not 42!`));
            }
            return v;
        });
}

// The rejection handler on this chain may be called **after** the
// rejection handler on the following chain
usingReject(1)
.then(v => console.log(v))
.catch(e => console.error("Error from usingReject:", e.message));

// The rejection handler on this chain may be called **before** the
// rejection handler on the preceding chain
usingThrow(2)
.then(v => console.log(v))
.catch(e => console.error("Error from usingThrow:", e.message));

If you run that, as of this writing you get:

Error from usingThrow: 2 is not 42!
Error from usingReject: 1 is not 42!

Note the order.

Compare that to the same chains but both using usingThrow:

function usingThrow(val) {
    return Promise.resolve(val)
        .then(v => {
            if (v !== 42) {
                throw new Error(`${v} is not 42!`);
            }
            return v;
        });
}

usingThrow(1)
.then(v => console.log(v))
.catch(e => console.error("Error from usingThrow:", e.message));

usingThrow(2)
.then(v => console.log(v))
.catch(e => console.error("Error from usingThrow:", e.message));

which shows that the rejection handlers ran in the other order:

Error from usingThrow: 1 is not 42!
Error from usingThrow: 2 is not 42!

I said "may" above because there's been some work in other areas that removed this unnecessary extra tick in other similar situations if all of the promises involved are native promises (not just thenables). (Specifically: In an async function, return await x originally introduced an extra async tick vs. return x while being otherwise identical; ES2020 changed it so that if x is a native promise, the extra tick is removed where there is no other difference.)

Again, any code that's that sensitive to the timing of the settlement of a promise is already broken. So really it doesn't/shouldn't matter.

In practical terms, as other answers have mentioned:

  • As Kevin B pointed out, throw won't work if you're in a callback to some other function you've used within your fulfillment handler — this is the biggie
  • As lukyer pointed out, throw abruptly terminates the function, which can be useful (but you're using return in your example, which does the same thing)
  • As Vencator pointed out, you can't use throw in a conditional expression (? :), at least not for now

Other than that, it's mostly a matter of style/preference, so as with most of those, agree with your team what you'll do (or that you don't care either way), and be consistent.

8

An example to try out. Just change isVersionThrow to false to use reject instead of throw.

const isVersionThrow = true

class TestClass {
  async testFunction () {
    if (isVersionThrow) {
      console.log('Throw version')
      throw new Error('Fail!')
    } else {
      console.log('Reject version')
      return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
        reject(new Error('Fail!'))
      })
    }
  }
}

const test = async () => {
  const test = new TestClass()
  try {
    var response = await test.testFunction()
    return response 
  } catch (error) {
    console.log('ERROR RETURNED')
    throw error 
  }  
}

test()
.then(result => {
  console.log('result: ' + result)
})
.catch(error => {
  console.log('error: ' + error)
})

1
  • Am I missing something or do both "versions" produce the same output?
    – Jamie-505
    Nov 14, 2022 at 10:48
5

The difference is ternary operator

  • You can use
return condition ? someData : Promise.reject(new Error('not OK'))
  • You can't use
return condition ? someData  : throw new Error('not OK')
1
1

I believe that in practice there is no real difference between reject() and throw statement, however there are some "properties" to note for each approach (as mentioned a lot of times here already, but repetition is what makes perfect)

throw

    1. may be used only in synchronous code of promise body

new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
    throw Error("works")

    scheduleSomeAsyncCode(() => {
      throw Error("will not work")
    })
  })
  .then((result) => console.log("never"))
  .catch((error) => console.log(error.message));

  • 1b) no matter if it is nested as long as it is synchronous (no callback)

new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
    nestedA();
  })
  .then((result) => console.log("never"))
  .catch((error) => console.log(error.message));

function nestedA() {
  nestedB();
}

function nestedB() {
  throw Error("nested throw works as well")
}

    1. cannot be used in asynchronous code

new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
    setTimeout(() => {
      throw Error("will not work")
    }, 1000);
  })
  .then((result) => console.log("never"))
  .catch((error) => console.log(error.message));

    1. terminates execution of function, i suppose that this point is not surprising

new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
    console.log("i am working fine");
    throw Error("my new error");
    console.log("i expect that i will not be executed");
  })
  .then((result) => console.log("never"))
  .catch((error) => console.log(error.message));

reject()

    1. may be used from callbacks

new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
    setTimeout(() => {
      setTimeout(() => {
        reject("this is working fine");
      }, 500);
    }, 500);
  })
  .then((result) => console.log("never"))
  .catch((error) => console.log(error));

  • 1a) in fact, it may be used from any place because what resolve/reject function does (from user perspective) is: resolve/reject -> here i have result/error and i am calling next then/catch function i stored

    1. does not terminate execution because resolve/reject is just a simple function triggering processing of result/error but after that returns as any other function

new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
    console.log("a) i am working fine");
    reject("c) my new error")
    console.log("b) i will be executed, and i may do everything i want because function is still running...");
    setTimeout(() => {
      console.log("d) like scheduling another tasks for example");
    }, 1000);

    resolve("however, this will not work, because only the first one called, either resolve() or reject(), wins");
  })
  .then((result) => console.log("never"))
  .catch((error) => console.log(error));

Summary

I personally use throw statement as it seems cleaner to me if there is no async code, where you must use reject() whether you want it or not.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.