I am attempting to use an async/await pattern in order to handle a scenario that might be considered "callback hell" if implemented otherwise.
Here is an extremely dumbed down version of the code. The real code has about 5 conditional HttpClient calls based on the data from the first call (not my api...) which is the reason why I am using the async/await pattern in the first place.
async blah(): Promise<boolean> {
try {
let resp = await this.http.get("https://httpstat.us/500").toPromise();
console.warn("you should not see this");
// the real code will logically call the api multiple times based on conditonal data from resp
// hence the attempted usage of async/await to avoid "callback hell"
// blah() will eventually return an object.
return true;
}
catch (err) {
console.error("caught inside blah()");
throw err;
}
}
ionViewDidLoad() {
this.blah().then(data => {
console.warn('okokokok');
}).catch(error => {
console.error(error)
});
}
What happens, I can see the call actually 500, but the code continues and the following is printed to the console:
polyfills.js:3 GET https://httpstat.us/500/ 500 (Internal Server Error)
main.js:927 you should not see this
main.js:940 okokokok
As you can see, it isn't catching the 500 (or any other http status I have tested with)
The device I am testing with is a Pixel 2 running P and the console data is coming from a Chrome device inspector session.
Any advice would be greatly appreciated.
** Edit: This is clearly an issue with the combination of ionic and angular... It should work...
** Edit: it turns out to 100% be an Angular issue... Not the framework itself but how an interceptor was implemented. I will leave this here instead of deleting the question in the rare case someone else requires it.
blah()
is returningtrue
, not the Promise.async
, so it will always return aPromise
(here resolving totrue
).toPromise
operator (for v6 its already there).