This case cannot happen when you write an async function() instead of returning promises explicitly.
TLDR: A function is hard to use when it sometimes returns a promise and sometimes throws an exception. When writing an async function, prefer to signal failure by returning a rejected promise.
The full story
When your function returns a promise ("async function"), try not to throw synchronous exceptions when encountering fatal errors.
So avoid this:
function foo(x) {
if (!x) {
throw "No x given"
} else
return new Promise(function(resolve, reject) {
...
});
}
}
It's hard to handle errors when calling foo, since we need to handle both a synchronous throw and an asynchronous rejection. Look how much code we need to handle failures of the foo() above:
try {
function onFulfilled() { ... }
function onRejected() { // handle async failure }
foo(x).then(onFulfilled, onRejected);
} catch (e) {
// handle synchronous failure
}
Instead you should signal an error by returning a rejected promise:
function foo(x) {
if (!x) {
return Promise.reject("No x given")
} else
return new Promise(function(resolve, reject) {
...
});
}
}
Now your caller only needs to handle async failure:
function onFulfilled() { ... }
function onRejected() { // handle async failure }
foo(x).then(onFulfilled, onRejected);
Converting exceptions to rejected promises
If you have an existing function that throws synchronous errors, and you want to convert all these throws to rejected promises, you can make the function async:
async function foo() {
throw "error"
}
foo() // returns Promise.reject("error")
await foo() // throws "error"
As an alternative you can use the behavior that exceptions thrown in promise callbacks will automatically be caught and converted to a rejected promise instead. That means if you really want to throw from foo() (or if you're calling another function that throws) you can wrap your code into the callback of a resolved promise:
function foo(x) {
var promise = Promise.resolve();
return promise.then(function() {
if (!x) {
throw "No x given"
} else
return new Promise(function(resolve, reject) {
...
});
}
});
}
This behavior is in all Promises/A+ Show archive.org snapshot compatible implementations like native promises, jQuery 3+ deferreds or Bluebird. Deferreds in jQuery 1 and 2 do not have this behavior.
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Promise-based functions should not throw exceptions Show archive.org snapshot