My question consist of two parts:
Part 1
According to standard ES6 Promise
I see that I forced to use catch
block everywhere, but it looks like copy/paste and looks weird.
Example:
I have some class which makes request to backend (lets call it API
class).
And I have a few requirements for API
class using:
1) I need to make requests in different parts of my application with single request errors processing:
// somewhere...
api.getUser().then(... some logic ...);
// somewhere in another module and in another part of app...
api.getUser().then(... some another logic...);
2) I want so 'then' blocks would work ONLY when 'getUsers' succeeded.
3) I don't want to write catch
block everywhere I use api.getUsers()
api.getUser()
// I don't want following
.catch(e => {
showAlert('request failed');
})
So I'm trying to implement single error processing inside of the class for all "users requests"
class API {
getUser() {
let promise = makeRequestToGetUser();
promise.catch(e => {
showAlert('request failed');
});
return promise;
}
}
...but if request fails I still forced to use catch
block
api.getUser()
.then(... some logic...)
.catch(() => {}) // <- I forced to write it to avoid of “Uncaught (in promise)” warning
... otherwise I'll get “Uncaught (in promise)” warning in console. So I don't know the way of how to avoid of .catch
block everywhere I use api
instance.
Seems this comes from throwing error in such code:
// This cause "Uncaught error"
Promise.reject('some value').then(() => {});
May be you can say 'just return in your class "catched" promise'.
class API {
getUser() {
return makeRequestToGetUser().catch(e => {
showAlert('request failed');
return ...
});
}
}
...but this contradict to my #2 requirement.
See this demo: https://stackblitz.com/edit/promises-catch-block-question
So my 1st question is how to implement described logic without writing catch
block everywhere I use api
call?
Part 2
I checked if the same API
class implementation with Q
library will get the same result and was surprised because I don't get “Uncaught (in promise)” warning
. BTW it is more expectable behavior than behavior of native ES6 Promises.
In this page https://promisesaplus.com/implementations I found that Q
library is implementation of Promises/A+ spec. But why does it have different behavior?
Does es6 promise respects Promises/A+ spec?
Can anybody explain why these libraries has different behavior, which one is correct, and how implement mentioned logic in case if "ES6 Promises implementation" is correct?
.then
is what to do on rejection. e.g. you can do.then(u => {…}, err => {})
to "ignore" the error, e => {}
everywhere. BTW my be in future I will need to wrap myAPI
class to some abstraction which makes some actions after request and return new promise. In this case I'll get the same problem again.