A take on Go Style Error Handling In JavaScript
Simplified result/error handling for JavaScript. Grip always returns a consistent call result ready to be handled. It makes the control flow similar to that of Golang, but doesn't force you to make additional null checks or create transitional variables to hold error results.
Grip doesn't force you to write code in a specific style or avoid using throw. It is just a helper that unwraps try-catch.
Instead of returning a nullish error, Grip always returns a consistent result interface:
const [value, status] = grip(callable) // or {value, status}
if (status.of(MySpecificError)) {
// handle specific error
}
if (status.fail()) {
// handle any error
}
The call result is better than tuple:
const result = grip(callable)
if (result.of(MySpecificError)) {
// handle specific error
}
if (result.fail()) {
// handle any error
}
console.log(result.value) // result[0]
Grip also works with Promises, functions that return promises, generators and async generators.
bun add github:nesterow/grip # or pnpm
The grip
function accepts a function or a promise and returns a result with return value and status.
The result can be hadled as either an object or a tuple.
import { grip } from '@nesterow/grip';
The result can be handled as an object: {value, status, Ok(), Fail(), Of(type)}
const res = await grip(
fetch('https://api.example.com')
);
if (res.fail()) {
// handle error
}
const json = await grip(
res.value.json()
);
if (json.of(SyntaxError)) {
// handle parse error
}
The result can also be received as a tuple if you want to handle errors in Go'ish style:
const [res, fetchStatus] = await grip(
fetch('https://api.example.com')
);
if (fetchStatus.fail()) {
// handle error
}
const [json, parseStatus] = await grip(
res.json()
);
if (parseStatus.of(SyntaxError)) {
// handle parse error
}
Grip can also handle functions:
const [result, status] = grip(() => "ok");
// result = "ok"
const [result1, status1] = grip(() => {
if (1) throw new Error("error")
});
// result1 = null
// status.Of(Error) = true
Generators can be handled using the iter()
method:
const res = grip(async function* () {
for (let i = 0; i < 3; i++) {
if (i == 2) throw new Error("2");
yield i;
}
});
for await (let [value, status] of res.iter()) {
if (status.of(Error)) {
// handle error properly
break;
}
// typeof value === "number"
console.log(value)
}
MIT