I am putting catches at the end, but they are returning empty object in one particular instance at least. Is a catch necessary for anything unbeknownst, or is it just screwing me up?
$( document).ready(function(){
app.callAPI()//a chainable a RSVP wrapper around a jquery call, with its own success() fail() passing forward to the wrapper, so it will either be a resolved or rejected thenable to which is now going to be chained
.then(
function(env) {
//set the property you needed now
app.someSpecialEnvObj = env;
},
function(rejectMessage){
console.log('call.API() cant set some special env object..');
console.log(rejectMessage);
}
)
.catch(
function(rejectMessage){
if(rejectMessage){
//a just incase, DOES IT HAVE VALUE, for somebody that may have not done their homework in the parent calls?
console.log('you have some kind of legitimate error, maybe even in callAPI() that is not part of any problems inside them. you may have forgotton handle something at an early state, your so lucky this is here!)
} else {
console.log('can this, and or will this ever run. i.e., is there any value to it, when the necessity to already be logging is being handled in each and every then already, guaranteeing that we WONT be missing ANYTHING')
}
}
);
});
Is it wrong? or is there some kind of use for it, even when I still use an error/reject handler on all usages of .then(resolve, reject)
methods in all parent chained then-ables?
EDIT: Better code example, I hope. I think I might be still be using some kind of anti-pattern in the naming, I rejectMessage
in my e.g., it's the jqXhr object right?
So maybe I should be naming them exactly that or what? i.e. jqXhr
? By the way, the reason I like to reject it on the spot inside each then()
, if there was an error, is because this way I can copiously log each individual call, if there was a problem specifically there, that way I don't have to track anything down. Micro-logging, because I can.
Promises are helping opening up the world of debugging this way.
Here's the three examples I have tried. I prefer method1, and method2, and by no means am I going back to method3, which is where I started off in the promise land.
//method 1
app.rsvpAjax = function (){
var async,
promise = new window.RSVP.Promise(function(resolve, reject){
async = $.extend( true, {},app.ajax, {
success: function(returnData) {
resolve(returnData);
},
error: function(jqXhr, textStatus, errorThrown){
console.log('async error');
console.log({jqXhr: jqXhr, textStatus: textStatus, errorThrown: errorThrown});
reject({ jqXhr: jqXhr, textStatus: textStatus, errorThrown: errorThrown}); //source of promise catch data believe
}
});
$.ajax(async); //make the call using jquery's ajax, passing it our reconstructed object, each and every time
});
return promise;
};
app.callAPI = function () {
var promise =app.rsvpAjax();
if ( !app.ajax.url ) {
console.log("need ajax url");
promise.reject(); //throw (reject now)
}
return promise;
};
//method 2
app.ajaxPromise = function(){
var promise, url = app.ajax.url;
var coreObj = { //our XMLHttpRequestwrapper object
ajax : function (method, url, args) { // Method that performs the ajax request
promise = window.RSVP.Promise( function (resolve, reject) { // Creating a promise
var client = new XMLHttpRequest(), // Instantiates the XMLHttpRequest
uri = url;
uri = url;
if (args && (method === 'POST' || method === 'PUT')) {
uri += '?';
var argcount = 0;
for (var key in args) {
if (args.hasOwnProperty(key)) {
if (argcount++) {
uri += '&';
}
uri += encodeURIComponent(key) + '=' + encodeURIComponent(args[key]);
}
}
}
client.open(method, uri);
client.send();
client.onload = function () {
if (this.status == 200) {
resolve(this.response); // Performs the function "resolve" when this.status is equal to 200
}
else {
reject(this.statusText); // Performs the function "reject" when this.status is different than 200
}
};
client.onerror = function () {
reject(this.statusText);
};
});
return promise; // Return the promise
}
};
// Adapter pattern
return {
'get' : function(args) {
return coreObj.ajax('GET', url, args);
},
'post' : function(args) {
return coreObj.ajax('POST', url, args);
},
'put' : function(args) {
return coreObj.ajax('PUT', url, args);
},
'delete' : function(args) {
return coreObj.ajax('DELETE', url, args);
}
};
};
app.callAPI = function () {
var async, callback;
async =app.ajaxPromise() ; //app.ajaxPromise() is what creates the RSVP PROMISE HERE<
if(app.ajax.type === 'GET'){async = async.get();}
else if(app.ajax.type === 'POST') {async = async.post();}
else if(app.ajax.type === 'PUT'){async = async.put();}
else if(app.ajax.type === 'DELETE'){ async = async.delete();}
callback = {
success: function (data) {
return JSON.parse(data);
},
error: function (reason) {
console.log('something went wrong here');
console.log(reason);
}
};
async = async.then(callback.success)
.catch(callback.error);
return async;
};
//method 3 using old school jquery deferreds
app.callAPI = function () {
//use $.Deferred instead of RSVP
async = $.ajax( app.ajax) //run the ajax call now
.then(
function (asyncData) { //call has been completed, do something now
return asyncData; //modify data if needed, then return, sweet success
},
function(rejectMessage) { //call failed miserably, log this thing
console.log('Unexpected error inside the callApi. There was a fail in the $.Deferred ajax call');
return rejectMessage;
}
);
return async;
};
I also run this somewhere onready
as another backup.
window.RSVP.on('error', function(error) {
window.console.assert(false, error);
var response;
if(error.jqXhr){
response = error.jqXhr;
} else {
//response = error;
response = 'is this working yet?';
}
console.log('rsvp_on_error_report')
console.log(response);
});
Edit error examples
//one weird error I can't understand, an empty string("")?
{
"jqXhr": {
"responseText": {
"readyState": 0,
"responseText": "",
"status": 0,
"statusText": "error"
},
"statusText": "error",
"status": 0
},
"textStatus": "error",
"errorThrown": "\"\""
}
//another wierd one, but this one comes from a different stream, the RSVP.on('error') function
{
"readyState": 0,
"responseText": "",
"status": 0,
"statusText": "error"
}
I think the general question deserves a simple answer without the example.
The pedantic technical answer is 'no', because
.catch(e)
is equivalent to.then(null, e)
.However (and this is a big "however"), unless you actually pass in
null
, you'll be passing in something that can fail when it runs (like a coding error), and you'll need a subsequentcatch
to catch that since the sibling rejection handler by design wont catch it:If this is the tail of a chain, then (even coding) errors in
onSuccess
are swallowed up forever. So don't do that.So the real answer is yes, unless you're returning the chain, in which case no.
All chains should be terminated, but if your code is only a part of a larger chain that the caller will add to after your call returns, then it is up to the caller to terminate it properly (unless your function is designed to never fail).
The rule I follow is: All chains must either be returned or terminated (with a
catch
).If I remember correctly, catch will fire when your promise is rejected. Since you have the fail callback attached, your catch will not fire unless you call reject function in either your fail or success callback. In other words, catch block is catching rejection in your then method.
That's the typical position for them - you handle all errors that were occurring somewhere in the chain. It's important not to forget to handle errors at all, and having a catch-all in the end is the recommended practise.
That's a bit odd. Usually all errors are handled in a central location (the
catch
in the end), but of course if you want you can handle them anywhere and then continue with the chain.Just make sure to understand the difference between an
onreject
handler in athen
and in acatch
, and you can use them freely. Still, thecatch
in the end is recommended to catch errors in thethen
callbacks themselves.Then the promise screwed up - it should never reject without a reason. Seems to be caused be the
in your code that should have been a
Not really. The problem is that
catch
is usually a catch-all, even catching unexpected exceptions. So if you can distinguish them, what would you do with the unexpected ones?Usually you'd set up some kind of global unhandled rejection handler for those, so that you do not have to make sure to handle them manually at the end of every promise chain.