OnError Callback Library For Typescript
Introduction
This TypeScript library provides the type signature for an OnError()
callback function.
Use this to delegate error handling to the code that is calling your library.
Quick Start
# run this from your Terminal
npm install @ganbarodigital/ts-on-error
// add this import to your Typescript code
import { OnError } from "@ganbarodigital/ts-on-error/V1"
VS Code users: once you've added a single import anywhere in your project, you'll then be able to auto-import anything else that this library exports.
V1 API
OnError()
export type OnError<E = object, T = never> = (reason: symbol, description: string, extra: E) => T;
OnError()
is a function type. It provides a standard function signature to use in error callbacks.
For example:
export const corruptState = Symbol("CORRUPT STATE");
export function doWork(input: object, onError: OnError<object, object>) {
// a made-up problem
if (input.property1 === undefined) {
// tell the error handler what went wrong
// and give it an opportunity to fix things too
input = onError(corruptState, "'property1' is missing", input);
}
}
The idea here is to make it easier to reuse code, by splitting up the error checking and the error handling:
- your library code is responsible for the error checking
- whoever is calling your library code is responsible for the error handling
OnError()
takes three parameters:
-
reason: symbol
is the type of error that has occurred. The calling code will use this to work out what to do with the error. -
description: string
is a human-readable explanation of the error. This should be suitable for adding to a log file. -
extra: E
is a data bag, containing any extra information relevant to the error. By default, it is an object. We've made it a generic type, so that you can override its type and avoid using type-guards at runtime.
By default, an OnError()
handler does not return. It should throw
an Error
of some kind.
If it's possible for the error handler to recover from the error, you can change the return type from never
to whatever suits.
NPM Scripts
npm run clean
Use npm run clean
to delete all of the compiled code.
npm run build
Use npm run build
to compile the Typescript into plain Javascript. The compiled code is placed into the lib/
folder.
npm run build
does not compile the unit test code.
npm run test
Use npm run test
to compile and run the unit tests. The compiled code is placed into the lib/
folder.
npm run cover
Use npm run cover
to compile the unit tests, run them, and see code coverage metrics.
Metrics are written to the terminal, and are also published as HTML into the coverage/
folder.