Related
Here's what I have going:
import 'whatwg-fetch';
function fetchVehicle(id) {
return dispatch => {
return dispatch({
type: 'FETCH_VEHICLE',
payload: fetch(`http://swapi.co/api/vehicles/${id}/`)
.then(status)
.then(res => res.json())
.catch(error => {
throw(error);
})
});
};
}
function status(res) {
if (!res.ok) {
return Promise.reject()
}
return res;
}
EDIT: The promise doesn't get rejected, that's what I'm trying to figure out.
I'm using this fetch polyfill in Redux with redux-promise-middleware.
Fetch promises only reject with a TypeError when a network error occurs. Since 4xx and 5xx responses aren't network errors, there's nothing to catch. You'll need to throw an error yourself to use Promise#catch.
A fetch Response conveniently supplies an ok , which tells you whether the request succeeded. Something like this should do the trick:
fetch(url).then((response) => {
if (response.ok) {
return response.json();
}
throw new Error('Something went wrong');
})
.then((responseJson) => {
// Do something with the response
})
.catch((error) => {
console.log(error)
});
The following login with username and password example shows how to:
Check response.ok
reject if not OK, instead of throw an error
Further process any error hints from server, e.g. validation issues
login() {
const url = "https://example.com/api/users/login";
const headers = {
Accept: "application/json",
"Content-Type": "application/json",
};
fetch(url, {
method: "POST",
headers,
body: JSON.stringify({
email: this.username,
password: this.password,
}),
})
.then((response) => {
// 1. check response.ok
if (response.ok) {
return response.json();
}
return Promise.reject(response); // 2. reject instead of throw
})
.then((json) => {
// all good, token is ready
this.store.commit("token", json.access_token);
})
.catch((response) => {
console.log(response.status, response.statusText);
// 3. get error messages, if any
response.json().then((json: any) => {
console.log(json);
})
});
},
Thanks for the help everyone, rejecting the promise in .catch() solved my issue:
export function fetchVehicle(id) {
return dispatch => {
return dispatch({
type: 'FETCH_VEHICLE',
payload: fetch(`http://swapi.co/api/vehicles/${id}/`)
.then(status)
.then(res => res.json())
.catch(error => {
return Promise.reject()
})
});
};
}
function status(res) {
if (!res.ok) {
throw new Error(res.statusText);
}
return res;
}
For me,
fny answers really got it all. since fetch is not throwing error, we need to throw/handle the error ourselves.
Posting my solution with async/await. I think it's more strait forward and readable
Solution 1: Not throwing an error, handle the error ourselves
async _fetch(request) {
const fetchResult = await fetch(request); //Making the req
const result = await fetchResult.json(); // parsing the response
if (fetchResult.ok) {
return result; // return success object
}
const responseError = {
type: 'Error',
message: result.message || 'Something went wrong',
data: result.data || '',
code: result.code || '',
};
const error = new Error();
error.info = responseError;
return (error);
}
Here if we getting an error, we are building an error object, plain JS object and returning it, the con is that we need to handle it outside.
How to use:
const userSaved = await apiCall(data); // calling fetch
if (userSaved instanceof Error) {
debug.log('Failed saving user', userSaved); // handle error
return;
}
debug.log('Success saving user', userSaved); // handle success
Solution 2: Throwing an error, using try/catch
async _fetch(request) {
const fetchResult = await fetch(request);
const result = await fetchResult.json();
if (fetchResult.ok) {
return result;
}
const responseError = {
type: 'Error',
message: result.message || 'Something went wrong',
data: result.data || '',
code: result.code || '',
};
let error = new Error();
error = { ...error, ...responseError };
throw (error);
}
Here we are throwing and error that we created, since Error ctor approve only string, Im creating the plain Error js object, and the use will be:
try {
const userSaved = await apiCall(data); // calling fetch
debug.log('Success saving user', userSaved); // handle success
} catch (e) {
debug.log('Failed saving user', userSaved); // handle error
}
Solution 3: Using customer error
async _fetch(request) {
const fetchResult = await fetch(request);
const result = await fetchResult.json();
if (fetchResult.ok) {
return result;
}
throw new ClassError(result.message, result.data, result.code);
}
And:
class ClassError extends Error {
constructor(message = 'Something went wrong', data = '', code = '') {
super();
this.message = message;
this.data = data;
this.code = code;
}
}
Hope it helped.
2021 TypeScript Answer
What I do is write a fetch wrapper that takes a generic and if the response is ok it will auto .json() and type assert the result, otherwise the wrapper throws the response
export const fetcher = async <T>(input: RequestInfo, init?: RequestInit) => {
const response = await fetch(input, init);
if (!response.ok) {
throw response;
}
return response.json() as Promise<T>;
};
and then I'll catch errors and check if they are an instanceof Response. That way TypeScript knows that error has Response properties such as status statusText body headers etc. and I can apply a custom message for each 4xx 5xx status code.
try {
return await fetcher<LoginResponse>("http://localhost:8080/login", {
method: "POST",
headers: {
Accept: "application/json",
"Content-Type": "application/json",
},
body: JSON.stringify({ email: "user#example.com", password: "passw0rd" }),
});
} catch (error) {
if (error instanceof Response) {
switch (error.status) {
case 401:
throw new Error("Invalid login credentials");
/* ... */
default:
throw new Error(`Unknown server error occured: ${error.statusText}`);
}
}
throw new Error(`Something went wrong: ${error.message || error}`);
}
and if something like a network error occurs it can be caught outside of the instanceof Response check with a more generic message i.e.
throw new Error(`Something went wrong: ${error.message || error}`);
The answer by #fny (the accepted answer) didn't work for me. The throw new Error() wasn't getting picked up by the .catch. My solution was to wrap the fetch with a function that builds a new promise:
function my_fetch(url, args) {
return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
fetch(url, args)
.then((response) => {
response.text().then((body) => {
if (response.ok) {
resolve(body)
} else {
reject(body)
}
})
})
.catch((error) => { reject(error) })
})
}
Now every error and non-ok return will be picked up by the .catch method:
my_fetch(url, args)
.then((response) => {
// Do something with the response
})
.catch((error) => {
// Do something with the error
})
function handleErrors(response) {
if (!response.ok) {
throw Error(response.statusText);
}
return response;
}
fetch("https://example.com/api/users")
.then(handleErrors)
.then(response => console.log("ok") )
.catch(error => console.log(error) );
I wasn't satisfied with any of the suggested solutions, so I played a bit with Fetch API to find a way to handle both success responses and error responses.
Plan was to get {status: XXX, message: 'a message'} format as a result in both cases.
Note: Success response can contain an empty body. In that case we fallback and use Response.status and Response.statusText to populate resulting response object.
fetch(url)
.then(handleResponse)
.then((responseJson) => {
// Do something with the response
})
.catch((error) => {
console.log(error)
});
export const handleResponse = (res) => {
if (!res.ok) {
return res
.text()
.then(result => JSON.parse(result))
.then(result => Promise.reject({ status: result.status, message: result.message }));
}
return res
.json()
.then(result => Promise.resolve(result))
.catch(() => Promise.resolve({ status: res.status, message: res.statusText }));
};
I just checked the status of the response object:
$promise.then( function successCallback(response) {
console.log(response);
if (response.status === 200) { ... }
});
Hope this helps for me throw Error is not working
function handleErrors(response) {
if (!response.ok) {
return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
setTimeout(() => {
reject({
status: response.status,
statusText: response.statusText,
});
}, 0);
});
}
return response.json();
}
function clickHandler(event) {
const textInput = input.value;
let output;
fetch(`${URL}${encodeURI(textInput)}`)
.then(handleErrors)
.then((json) => {
output = json.contents.translated;
console.log(output);
outputDiv.innerHTML = "<p>" + output + "</p>";
})
.catch((error) => alert(error.statusText));
}
Another (shorter) version that resonates with most answers:
fetch(url)
.then(response => response.ok ? response.json() : Promise.reject(response))
.then(json => doStuff(json)) //all good
//next line is optional
.catch(response => handleError(response)) //handle error
I'm learning React and I'm using axios and JWT for authentication. I have written an interceptor to refresh the token automatically:
privateAxios.interceptors.response.use(
(response) => {
return response;
},
(error) => {
const { config, response } = error;
const originalRequest = config;
if (response?.status === 401) {
apiProvider
.refreshToken()
.then(() => {
let headers = getAuthHeaders();
privateAxios.defaults.headers = headers;
originalRequest.headers = headers;
return privateAxios(originalRequest);
})
.catch((err) => {
logout();
return Promise.reject(err);
});
}
return Promise.reject(error);
}
);
On my component I have the following:
api.post(data)
.then(() => {
showSuccessFeedbackForm();
reloadTable();
handleClose();
})
.catch((error) => {
setAlertInfos({
message: JSON.stringify(error.response.data),
severity: "error",
});
setShowAlert(true);
})
.finally(() => {
setIsLoaded(true);
});
My problem is that I want to continue with the component's normal "flow" (i.e., showSuccessFeedbackForm() and reloadTable() and handleClose()) if the token needed to be refreshed (when the code reaches return privateAxios(originalRequest)).
How can I accomplish this?
It looks like you should just have to return the apiProvider.refreshToken()... call. After return privateAxios(originalRequest); returns, then return Promise.reject(error); is executing which causes the front-end to receiving an rejection not a resolution.
Consider this intercepted error which does not throw an error to the frontend which still "resolves":
axios.interceptors.response.use(
(res) => res,
(err) => {
console.log("##### AXIOS ERROR #####");
dispatch(increment());
}
);
Simply changing it to this causes the front-end to catch an error which is what your code is essentially doing:
axios.interceptors.response.use(
(res) => res,
(err) => {
console.log("##### AXIOS ERROR #####");
return Promise.reject();
}
);
Here's what I have going:
import 'whatwg-fetch';
function fetchVehicle(id) {
return dispatch => {
return dispatch({
type: 'FETCH_VEHICLE',
payload: fetch(`http://swapi.co/api/vehicles/${id}/`)
.then(status)
.then(res => res.json())
.catch(error => {
throw(error);
})
});
};
}
function status(res) {
if (!res.ok) {
return Promise.reject()
}
return res;
}
EDIT: The promise doesn't get rejected, that's what I'm trying to figure out.
I'm using this fetch polyfill in Redux with redux-promise-middleware.
Fetch promises only reject with a TypeError when a network error occurs. Since 4xx and 5xx responses aren't network errors, there's nothing to catch. You'll need to throw an error yourself to use Promise#catch.
A fetch Response conveniently supplies an ok , which tells you whether the request succeeded. Something like this should do the trick:
fetch(url).then((response) => {
if (response.ok) {
return response.json();
}
throw new Error('Something went wrong');
})
.then((responseJson) => {
// Do something with the response
})
.catch((error) => {
console.log(error)
});
The following login with username and password example shows how to:
Check response.ok
reject if not OK, instead of throw an error
Further process any error hints from server, e.g. validation issues
login() {
const url = "https://example.com/api/users/login";
const headers = {
Accept: "application/json",
"Content-Type": "application/json",
};
fetch(url, {
method: "POST",
headers,
body: JSON.stringify({
email: this.username,
password: this.password,
}),
})
.then((response) => {
// 1. check response.ok
if (response.ok) {
return response.json();
}
return Promise.reject(response); // 2. reject instead of throw
})
.then((json) => {
// all good, token is ready
this.store.commit("token", json.access_token);
})
.catch((response) => {
console.log(response.status, response.statusText);
// 3. get error messages, if any
response.json().then((json: any) => {
console.log(json);
})
});
},
Thanks for the help everyone, rejecting the promise in .catch() solved my issue:
export function fetchVehicle(id) {
return dispatch => {
return dispatch({
type: 'FETCH_VEHICLE',
payload: fetch(`http://swapi.co/api/vehicles/${id}/`)
.then(status)
.then(res => res.json())
.catch(error => {
return Promise.reject()
})
});
};
}
function status(res) {
if (!res.ok) {
throw new Error(res.statusText);
}
return res;
}
For me,
fny answers really got it all. since fetch is not throwing error, we need to throw/handle the error ourselves.
Posting my solution with async/await. I think it's more strait forward and readable
Solution 1: Not throwing an error, handle the error ourselves
async _fetch(request) {
const fetchResult = await fetch(request); //Making the req
const result = await fetchResult.json(); // parsing the response
if (fetchResult.ok) {
return result; // return success object
}
const responseError = {
type: 'Error',
message: result.message || 'Something went wrong',
data: result.data || '',
code: result.code || '',
};
const error = new Error();
error.info = responseError;
return (error);
}
Here if we getting an error, we are building an error object, plain JS object and returning it, the con is that we need to handle it outside.
How to use:
const userSaved = await apiCall(data); // calling fetch
if (userSaved instanceof Error) {
debug.log('Failed saving user', userSaved); // handle error
return;
}
debug.log('Success saving user', userSaved); // handle success
Solution 2: Throwing an error, using try/catch
async _fetch(request) {
const fetchResult = await fetch(request);
const result = await fetchResult.json();
if (fetchResult.ok) {
return result;
}
const responseError = {
type: 'Error',
message: result.message || 'Something went wrong',
data: result.data || '',
code: result.code || '',
};
let error = new Error();
error = { ...error, ...responseError };
throw (error);
}
Here we are throwing and error that we created, since Error ctor approve only string, Im creating the plain Error js object, and the use will be:
try {
const userSaved = await apiCall(data); // calling fetch
debug.log('Success saving user', userSaved); // handle success
} catch (e) {
debug.log('Failed saving user', userSaved); // handle error
}
Solution 3: Using customer error
async _fetch(request) {
const fetchResult = await fetch(request);
const result = await fetchResult.json();
if (fetchResult.ok) {
return result;
}
throw new ClassError(result.message, result.data, result.code);
}
And:
class ClassError extends Error {
constructor(message = 'Something went wrong', data = '', code = '') {
super();
this.message = message;
this.data = data;
this.code = code;
}
}
Hope it helped.
2021 TypeScript Answer
What I do is write a fetch wrapper that takes a generic and if the response is ok it will auto .json() and type assert the result, otherwise the wrapper throws the response
export const fetcher = async <T>(input: RequestInfo, init?: RequestInit) => {
const response = await fetch(input, init);
if (!response.ok) {
throw response;
}
return response.json() as Promise<T>;
};
and then I'll catch errors and check if they are an instanceof Response. That way TypeScript knows that error has Response properties such as status statusText body headers etc. and I can apply a custom message for each 4xx 5xx status code.
try {
return await fetcher<LoginResponse>("http://localhost:8080/login", {
method: "POST",
headers: {
Accept: "application/json",
"Content-Type": "application/json",
},
body: JSON.stringify({ email: "user#example.com", password: "passw0rd" }),
});
} catch (error) {
if (error instanceof Response) {
switch (error.status) {
case 401:
throw new Error("Invalid login credentials");
/* ... */
default:
throw new Error(`Unknown server error occured: ${error.statusText}`);
}
}
throw new Error(`Something went wrong: ${error.message || error}`);
}
and if something like a network error occurs it can be caught outside of the instanceof Response check with a more generic message i.e.
throw new Error(`Something went wrong: ${error.message || error}`);
The answer by #fny (the accepted answer) didn't work for me. The throw new Error() wasn't getting picked up by the .catch. My solution was to wrap the fetch with a function that builds a new promise:
function my_fetch(url, args) {
return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
fetch(url, args)
.then((response) => {
response.text().then((body) => {
if (response.ok) {
resolve(body)
} else {
reject(body)
}
})
})
.catch((error) => { reject(error) })
})
}
Now every error and non-ok return will be picked up by the .catch method:
my_fetch(url, args)
.then((response) => {
// Do something with the response
})
.catch((error) => {
// Do something with the error
})
function handleErrors(response) {
if (!response.ok) {
throw Error(response.statusText);
}
return response;
}
fetch("https://example.com/api/users")
.then(handleErrors)
.then(response => console.log("ok") )
.catch(error => console.log(error) );
I wasn't satisfied with any of the suggested solutions, so I played a bit with Fetch API to find a way to handle both success responses and error responses.
Plan was to get {status: XXX, message: 'a message'} format as a result in both cases.
Note: Success response can contain an empty body. In that case we fallback and use Response.status and Response.statusText to populate resulting response object.
fetch(url)
.then(handleResponse)
.then((responseJson) => {
// Do something with the response
})
.catch((error) => {
console.log(error)
});
export const handleResponse = (res) => {
if (!res.ok) {
return res
.text()
.then(result => JSON.parse(result))
.then(result => Promise.reject({ status: result.status, message: result.message }));
}
return res
.json()
.then(result => Promise.resolve(result))
.catch(() => Promise.resolve({ status: res.status, message: res.statusText }));
};
I just checked the status of the response object:
$promise.then( function successCallback(response) {
console.log(response);
if (response.status === 200) { ... }
});
Hope this helps for me throw Error is not working
function handleErrors(response) {
if (!response.ok) {
return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
setTimeout(() => {
reject({
status: response.status,
statusText: response.statusText,
});
}, 0);
});
}
return response.json();
}
function clickHandler(event) {
const textInput = input.value;
let output;
fetch(`${URL}${encodeURI(textInput)}`)
.then(handleErrors)
.then((json) => {
output = json.contents.translated;
console.log(output);
outputDiv.innerHTML = "<p>" + output + "</p>";
})
.catch((error) => alert(error.statusText));
}
Another (shorter) version that resonates with most answers:
fetch(url)
.then(response => response.ok ? response.json() : Promise.reject(response))
.then(json => doStuff(json)) //all good
//next line is optional
.catch(response => handleError(response)) //handle error
Here's what I have going:
import 'whatwg-fetch';
function fetchVehicle(id) {
return dispatch => {
return dispatch({
type: 'FETCH_VEHICLE',
payload: fetch(`http://swapi.co/api/vehicles/${id}/`)
.then(status)
.then(res => res.json())
.catch(error => {
throw(error);
})
});
};
}
function status(res) {
if (!res.ok) {
return Promise.reject()
}
return res;
}
EDIT: The promise doesn't get rejected, that's what I'm trying to figure out.
I'm using this fetch polyfill in Redux with redux-promise-middleware.
Fetch promises only reject with a TypeError when a network error occurs. Since 4xx and 5xx responses aren't network errors, there's nothing to catch. You'll need to throw an error yourself to use Promise#catch.
A fetch Response conveniently supplies an ok , which tells you whether the request succeeded. Something like this should do the trick:
fetch(url).then((response) => {
if (response.ok) {
return response.json();
}
throw new Error('Something went wrong');
})
.then((responseJson) => {
// Do something with the response
})
.catch((error) => {
console.log(error)
});
The following login with username and password example shows how to:
Check response.ok
reject if not OK, instead of throw an error
Further process any error hints from server, e.g. validation issues
login() {
const url = "https://example.com/api/users/login";
const headers = {
Accept: "application/json",
"Content-Type": "application/json",
};
fetch(url, {
method: "POST",
headers,
body: JSON.stringify({
email: this.username,
password: this.password,
}),
})
.then((response) => {
// 1. check response.ok
if (response.ok) {
return response.json();
}
return Promise.reject(response); // 2. reject instead of throw
})
.then((json) => {
// all good, token is ready
this.store.commit("token", json.access_token);
})
.catch((response) => {
console.log(response.status, response.statusText);
// 3. get error messages, if any
response.json().then((json: any) => {
console.log(json);
})
});
},
Thanks for the help everyone, rejecting the promise in .catch() solved my issue:
export function fetchVehicle(id) {
return dispatch => {
return dispatch({
type: 'FETCH_VEHICLE',
payload: fetch(`http://swapi.co/api/vehicles/${id}/`)
.then(status)
.then(res => res.json())
.catch(error => {
return Promise.reject()
})
});
};
}
function status(res) {
if (!res.ok) {
throw new Error(res.statusText);
}
return res;
}
For me,
fny answers really got it all. since fetch is not throwing error, we need to throw/handle the error ourselves.
Posting my solution with async/await. I think it's more strait forward and readable
Solution 1: Not throwing an error, handle the error ourselves
async _fetch(request) {
const fetchResult = await fetch(request); //Making the req
const result = await fetchResult.json(); // parsing the response
if (fetchResult.ok) {
return result; // return success object
}
const responseError = {
type: 'Error',
message: result.message || 'Something went wrong',
data: result.data || '',
code: result.code || '',
};
const error = new Error();
error.info = responseError;
return (error);
}
Here if we getting an error, we are building an error object, plain JS object and returning it, the con is that we need to handle it outside.
How to use:
const userSaved = await apiCall(data); // calling fetch
if (userSaved instanceof Error) {
debug.log('Failed saving user', userSaved); // handle error
return;
}
debug.log('Success saving user', userSaved); // handle success
Solution 2: Throwing an error, using try/catch
async _fetch(request) {
const fetchResult = await fetch(request);
const result = await fetchResult.json();
if (fetchResult.ok) {
return result;
}
const responseError = {
type: 'Error',
message: result.message || 'Something went wrong',
data: result.data || '',
code: result.code || '',
};
let error = new Error();
error = { ...error, ...responseError };
throw (error);
}
Here we are throwing and error that we created, since Error ctor approve only string, Im creating the plain Error js object, and the use will be:
try {
const userSaved = await apiCall(data); // calling fetch
debug.log('Success saving user', userSaved); // handle success
} catch (e) {
debug.log('Failed saving user', userSaved); // handle error
}
Solution 3: Using customer error
async _fetch(request) {
const fetchResult = await fetch(request);
const result = await fetchResult.json();
if (fetchResult.ok) {
return result;
}
throw new ClassError(result.message, result.data, result.code);
}
And:
class ClassError extends Error {
constructor(message = 'Something went wrong', data = '', code = '') {
super();
this.message = message;
this.data = data;
this.code = code;
}
}
Hope it helped.
2021 TypeScript Answer
What I do is write a fetch wrapper that takes a generic and if the response is ok it will auto .json() and type assert the result, otherwise the wrapper throws the response
export const fetcher = async <T>(input: RequestInfo, init?: RequestInit) => {
const response = await fetch(input, init);
if (!response.ok) {
throw response;
}
return response.json() as Promise<T>;
};
and then I'll catch errors and check if they are an instanceof Response. That way TypeScript knows that error has Response properties such as status statusText body headers etc. and I can apply a custom message for each 4xx 5xx status code.
try {
return await fetcher<LoginResponse>("http://localhost:8080/login", {
method: "POST",
headers: {
Accept: "application/json",
"Content-Type": "application/json",
},
body: JSON.stringify({ email: "user#example.com", password: "passw0rd" }),
});
} catch (error) {
if (error instanceof Response) {
switch (error.status) {
case 401:
throw new Error("Invalid login credentials");
/* ... */
default:
throw new Error(`Unknown server error occured: ${error.statusText}`);
}
}
throw new Error(`Something went wrong: ${error.message || error}`);
}
and if something like a network error occurs it can be caught outside of the instanceof Response check with a more generic message i.e.
throw new Error(`Something went wrong: ${error.message || error}`);
The answer by #fny (the accepted answer) didn't work for me. The throw new Error() wasn't getting picked up by the .catch. My solution was to wrap the fetch with a function that builds a new promise:
function my_fetch(url, args) {
return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
fetch(url, args)
.then((response) => {
response.text().then((body) => {
if (response.ok) {
resolve(body)
} else {
reject(body)
}
})
})
.catch((error) => { reject(error) })
})
}
Now every error and non-ok return will be picked up by the .catch method:
my_fetch(url, args)
.then((response) => {
// Do something with the response
})
.catch((error) => {
// Do something with the error
})
function handleErrors(response) {
if (!response.ok) {
throw Error(response.statusText);
}
return response;
}
fetch("https://example.com/api/users")
.then(handleErrors)
.then(response => console.log("ok") )
.catch(error => console.log(error) );
I wasn't satisfied with any of the suggested solutions, so I played a bit with Fetch API to find a way to handle both success responses and error responses.
Plan was to get {status: XXX, message: 'a message'} format as a result in both cases.
Note: Success response can contain an empty body. In that case we fallback and use Response.status and Response.statusText to populate resulting response object.
fetch(url)
.then(handleResponse)
.then((responseJson) => {
// Do something with the response
})
.catch((error) => {
console.log(error)
});
export const handleResponse = (res) => {
if (!res.ok) {
return res
.text()
.then(result => JSON.parse(result))
.then(result => Promise.reject({ status: result.status, message: result.message }));
}
return res
.json()
.then(result => Promise.resolve(result))
.catch(() => Promise.resolve({ status: res.status, message: res.statusText }));
};
I just checked the status of the response object:
$promise.then( function successCallback(response) {
console.log(response);
if (response.status === 200) { ... }
});
Hope this helps for me throw Error is not working
function handleErrors(response) {
if (!response.ok) {
return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
setTimeout(() => {
reject({
status: response.status,
statusText: response.statusText,
});
}, 0);
});
}
return response.json();
}
function clickHandler(event) {
const textInput = input.value;
let output;
fetch(`${URL}${encodeURI(textInput)}`)
.then(handleErrors)
.then((json) => {
output = json.contents.translated;
console.log(output);
outputDiv.innerHTML = "<p>" + output + "</p>";
})
.catch((error) => alert(error.statusText));
}
Another (shorter) version that resonates with most answers:
fetch(url)
.then(response => response.ok ? response.json() : Promise.reject(response))
.then(json => doStuff(json)) //all good
//next line is optional
.catch(response => handleError(response)) //handle error
When I call the request function passing a number which I know I will get a 404 error, I cant handle it, I dont know how to do it.
async request(number) {
var request = "https://reqres.in/api/users/"+number;
fetch(request, {method: "GET"})
.then((response) => {
return response.json();
})
.then((responseJson) => {
this.setState({nombre:responseJson.data.first_name})
})
.catch((error) => {
this.setState({nombre:error})
}).done();
}
Full code: https://codeshare.io/5wWo9p
you can check for response status to handle 404 or other errors
use below example:
fetch('your url goes here')
.then(response => {
if (response.ok) {
return response.json()
} else if(response.status === 404) {
return Promise.reject('error 404')
} else {
return Promise.reject('some other error: ' + response.status)
}
})
.then(data => console.log('data is', data))
.catch(error => console.log('error is', error));
Error 404 is normally interpreted as (kind of) success and don't go into catch section. But you can send it into catch by throwing error … like:
fetch(
request
).then( ( /** #type {Response} */ response ) =>
{
if ( response.ok ) {
return response.json();
} else {
throw 'some error text';
}
} ).then( ( responseJson ) =>
{
// to something with success response
} ).catch( ( error ) =>
{
// every possible kind of error even 404
} );