Correct Try...Catch Syntax Using Async/Await Correct Try...Catch Syntax Using Async/Await javascript javascript

Correct Try...Catch Syntax Using Async/Await


It seems to be best practice not to place multiple lines of business logic in the try body

Actually I'd say it is. You usually want to catch all exceptions from working with the value:

try {    const createdUser = await this.User.create(userInfo);    console.log(createdUser)    // business logic goes here} catch (error) {    console.error(error) // from creation or business logic}

If you want to catch and handle errors only from the promise, you have three choices:

  • Declare the variable outside, and branch depending on whether there was an exception or not. That can take various forms, like

    • assign a default value to the variable in the catch block
    • return early or re-throw an exception from the catch block
    • set a flag whether the catch block caught an exception, and test for it in an if condition
    • test for the value of the variable to have been assigned
      let createdUser; // or use `var` inside the block  try {      createdUser = await this.User.create(userInfo);  } catch (error) {      console.error(error) // from creation  }  if (createdUser) { // user was successfully created      console.log(createdUser)      // business logic goes here  }
  • Test the caught exception for its type, and handle or rethrow it based on that.

      try {      const createdUser = await this.User.create(userInfo);      // user was successfully created      console.log(createdUser)      // business logic goes here  } catch (error) {      if (error instanceof CreationError) {          console.error(error) // from creation      } else {          throw error;      }  }

    Unfortunately, standard JavaScript (still) doesn't have syntax support for conditional exceptions.

    If your method doesn't return promises that are rejected with specific enough errors, you can do that yourself by re-throwing something more appropriate in a .catch() handler:

      try {      const createdUser = await this.User.create(userInfo).catch(err => {          throw new CreationError(err.message, {code: "USER_CREATE"});      });      …  } …

    See also Handling multiple catches in promise chain for the pre-async/await version of this.

  • Use then with two callbacks instead of try/catch. This really is the least ugly way and my personal recommendation also for its simplicity and correctness, not relying on tagged errors or looks of the result value to distinguish between fulfillment and rejection of the promise:

      await this.User.create(userInfo).then(createdUser => {      // user was successfully created      console.log(createdUser)      // business logic goes here  }, error => {      console.error(error) // from creation  });

    Of course it comes with the drawback of introducing callback functions, meaning you cannot as easily break/continue loops or do early returns from the outer function.


Another simpler approach is to append .catch to the promise function. ex:

const createdUser = await this.User.create(userInfo).catch( error => {// handle error})


I usually use the Promise's catch() function to return an object with an error property on failure.

For example, in your case i'd do:

const createdUser = await this.User.create(userInfo)          .catch(error => { error }); // <--- the added catchif (Object(createdUser).error) {    console.error(error)}

If you don't like to keep adding the catch() calls, you can add a helper function to the Function's prototype:

Function.prototype.withCatcher = function withCatcher() {    const result = this.apply(this, arguments);    if (!Object(result).catch) {        throw `${this.name}() must return a Promise when using withCatcher()`;    }    return result.catch(error => ({ error }));};

And now you'll be able to do:

const createdUser = await this.User.create.withCatcher(userInfo);if (Object(createdUser).error) {    console.error(createdUser.error);}


EDIT 03/2020

You can also add a default "catch to an error object" function to the Promise object like so:

Promise.prototype.catchToObj = function catchToObj() {    return this.catch(error => ({ error }));};

And then use it as follows:

const createdUser = await this.User.create(userInfo).catchToObj();if (createdUser && createdUser.error) {    console.error(createdUser.error);}