26

This is my Error Boundary file -

class ErrorHandling extends Component {
    state = { hasError: false }

    componentDidCatch() {
        this.setState({ hasError: true })
    }

    render() {
        // debugger
        if (this.state.hasError) {
            return <div>Error in Component</div>
        }
        return this.props.children
    }
}

And the other file is -

import React, { Component } from 'react';

// Intentionally I have added syntax error below 'd'

function Intermediate(props) {
    return <h1>hi</h1>;d
}
export default Intermediate

And in my App.js

<ErrorHandling>
  <Intermediate />
</ErrorHandling>

It is causing the application to break without catching the error. Here is the error is seen on the browser screen

enter image description here

The more detailed version here- https://codepen.io/meghana1991/pen/abojydj?editors=0010

When I use the same code in my local with multiple files as above listed, it doesn't work

2 Answers 2

42

You can't catch compile-time errors, the Error Boundaries are for run-time errors within the UI.

Refer to Compile time vs run time errors.

Moreover, you have to use getDerivedStateFromError in order to add additional render on fall back UI:

class ErrorBoundary extends React.Component {
  state = {
    hasError: false,
    error: { message: '', stack: '' },
    info: { componentStack: '' }
  };

  static getDerivedStateFromError = error => {
    return { hasError: true };
  };

  componentDidCatch = (error, info) => {
    this.setState({ error, info });
  };

  render() {
    const { hasError, error, info } = this.state;
    const { children } = this.props;

    return hasError ? <ErrorComponent/> : children;
  }
}

For checking your ErrorBoundary, throw an error from a reachable section in the component tree which is not:

  • Event handlers
  • Asynchronous code (e.g. setTimeout or requestAnimationFrame callbacks)
  • Server side rendering
  • Errors thrown in the error boundary itself (rather than its children)
const ButtonComponent = () => {
  throw Error("error!");
  return <></>;
};

Note: In development env you will always see the error overlay unless you turn it off or close it with the X button.


Full example:

const ErrorComponent = () => {
  return <h1>Something went wrong</h1>;
};

class ErrorBoundary extends React.Component {
  state = {
    hasError: false,
    error: { message: "", stack: "" },
    info: { componentStack: "" }
  };

  static getDerivedStateFromError = error => {
    return { hasError: true };
  };

  componentDidCatch = (error, info) => {
    this.setState({ error, info });
  };

  render() {
    const { hasError, error, info } = this.state;
    console.log(error, info);
    const { children } = this.props;

    return hasError ? <ErrorComponent /> : children;
  }
}

const ButtonComponent = () => {
  throw Error("error!");
  return <></>;
};

const App = () => {
  return (
    <ErrorBoundary>
      <ButtonComponent />
    </ErrorBoundary>
  );
};

Edit Error-Boundary Example

17
  • 3
    Tried this now. But unfortunately not working. I still see the error on my app screen.
    – M3ghana
    Sep 15, 2019 at 10:29
  • 34
    In development env you will always see the error overlay unless you turn it off or close it with the X button. Sep 15, 2019 at 10:31
  • Also add to your question what you seeing, we can't guess Sep 15, 2019 at 10:31
  • Added. Please check
    – M3ghana
    Sep 15, 2019 at 10:33
  • 4
    @ShamseerAhammed Updated the example, you can't catch errors from event handlers like onClick, thank you for catching it up. Jun 30, 2020 at 11:54
3

The thing is: the nice fallback UI you can see in the React docs example only appears in production. So you have to run the suggested by create-react-app (id you use it) command:

npm run build
# wait for it to finish
serve -s build

Then open localhost:5000 in your browser (if you see this address in the terminal mentioned). This way the React docs example works fine.

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