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Necati Özmen for Refine

Posted on • Originally published at refine.dev

Error Handling With try, catch and finally Blocks in JavaScript

Author: Abdullah Numan

Introduction

This post is about graceful error handling in JavaScript where we explore the use of try/catch/finally blocks.

Steps we'll cover:

What are Errors?

Errors are integral part of programming. Errors in JavaScript can arise while writing code due to syntax related issues like missing or mistyped variables, duplicate variables, wrong use of JavaScript constructs, etc. They can also happen at run time due to internal errors at an external server, unreachable resources at an API endpoint, broken or missing data structures - whose interfaces are usually manipulated by our program, etc.

Syntax errors are generally tracked by linters but are also pointed out when the buggy code is executed by JavaScript's engine, i.e. at run time. Errors thrown at run time are often referred to as exceptions. Exceptions throw an Error object that - if unhandled proactively - instantly terminates the script and does not allow execution of the rest of the code.

So, when an error is expected, in order to avoid breaking our program, it is important to handle errors gracefully and direct the flow of the program to a safe avenue where further execution resumes unhindered.

What is Graceful Error Handling?

Graceful error handling refers to an approach in programming where we proactively consider the scenarios that might lead to an error, design our control flow to handle these possible errors and direct the control of the program in each case in such a way that execution continues unterminated.

In JavaScript, we do this with the try/catch/finally construct.

In this article, we get into the details of what the try, catch and finally blocks represent and how they work together with examples. And on the way, we will discuss about what nesting of these blocks bring to the table. We'll also spend some time delving into how the finally {...} block is used to guide the control of the script to carry out routine procedures, like closing down a write stream in a file.

Let's start with how try/catch/finally works first.


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How try/catch/finally Blocks Work

The try/catch/finally construct, it's obvious, can have three possible blocks. A try {...} block, a catch {...} block and a finally {...} block. Of these three, try {...} is always a must. And we need one more: either catch {...} or finally {...} to make the try {...} block relevant. The possible scenarios covered by this are:

// Possibility 1: try/catch statement
try {
  // Things to be tried
} catch(e) {
  // Catch errors thrown in try and do something with it
}


// Possibility 2: try/finally statement
try {
  // Things to be tried
} finally {
  // Standard procedures to be completed regardless of the output in try block
}
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So at least two blocks make up a try control flow. We can also have another possibility that involves the finally {...} block as the third:

try {
  // Try stuff
  // Throw graceful error
} catch(e) {
  // Catch error and do relevant stuff like log to console, retry, redirect, etc.
} finally {
  // Do standard stuff like cleanup, closing file, send log data, etc after try and catch
}
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Below, we go through each block with examples for each possible scenario above.

Running Usual Code In The try Block

The try {...} block contains the code which we want to execute in our normal control flow but bears the risk of throwing an error. It could be just another part of the synchronous procedures we declare in our script, such as the first console.log() statement below:

  console.log('We are exploring error handling with try/catch/finally');
  // 'We are exploring error handling with try/catch/finally'

  console.log('This is safe avenue.');
  // 'This is safe avenue.'
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Here, the control makes it to the safe zone and logs both statements. But if we introduce an error, the program crashes entirely - not reaching the the safe avenue:

console.logd('We are exploring error handling with try/catch/finally');
console.log('This is safe avenue.');

// TypeError: console.logd is not a function
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Here, the intentional mistake in console.logd throws a TypeError. And strikingly, the execution is halted entirely. No dealing with the error, no redirection, just a bunch of stack information.

That's bad. We need to deal with this proactively.

Let's use a try/catch block. We need to put the code of our interest inside the try block:

try {
  console.logd('We are exploring error handling with try/catch/finally');
} catch {
  console.log(`Hello, you erred'n we messed. We are thy m'ssinjas.`);
};

console.log('This is safe avenue.');

// Hello, you erred'n we messed. We are thy m'ssinjas.
// This is safe avenue.
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Now, we placed our console.logd() statement inside the try block. It's still buggy and throws the same exception, but it did not lead to termination of execution. It instead diverted the control to the catch block, executed the code there and eventually moved control to the safe zone.

Let's just fix the error so the control remains in the try block and the program makes it to the safe zone through our desired, error-free path:

try {
  console.log('We are exploring error handling with try/catch/finally');
} catch {
  console.log(`Hello, you erred'n we messed. We are thy m'ssinjas.`);
};

console.log('This is safe avenue.');

// We are exploring error handling with try/catch/finally
// This is safe avenue.
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And it does.

try Block with Synchronous Functions

We can invoke any function inside the try block. Let's refactor the first log statement into a function and use it inside try block:

function sayWhatWeReDoing() {
  console.log('We are exploring error handling with try/catch/finally');
};

try {
  sayWhatWeReDoing();
} catch {
  console.log(`Hello, you erred'n we messed. We are thy m'ssinjas.`);
};

console.log('This is safe avenue.');
// We are exploring error handling with try/catch/finally
// This is safe avenue.
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The result is the same.

The catch Block

Now, as we've seen in the buggy console.logd() example, presence of the catch block creates a fork when we have errors in our desired flow in the try block. Let's focus on the catch block now.

The catch block offers an alternate channel to transfer execution control in the case of an error raised in the try block. When an error is raised, the catch block allows a way out from crashing the program. That is, the catch block allows us to handle errors gracefully.

catch Without the Error Object

In the previous example, when we erred with console.logd(), we were able to log another statement we provided in the catch block:

try {
  console.logd('We are exploring error handling with try/catch/finally');
} catch {
  console.log(`Hello, you erred'n we messed. We are thy m'ssinjas.`);
};

console.log('This is safe avenue.');

// Hello, you erred'n we messed. We are thy m'ssinjas.
// This is safe avenue.
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Notice in the beginning of the catch block, we don't have any argument passed. This is because, here we did not require access to the Error object produced by our error.

So, we may choose to ignore the Error object totally.

catch With the Error Object

However, we may also choose to use the Error object if we need to. And most often we do.

We can access the Error object as an argument passed to the catch block, with catch(e) or anything replacing e really. It's the only argument that's available from try to the catch block. And it's not available to other blocks.

It consists of the name of the error and a message. Let's see what the error was in our above case:

try {
  console.logd('We are exploring error handling with try/catch/finally');
} catch(e) {
  console.log(`${e.name}: ${e.message}`);
};

console.log('This is safe avenue.');

// TypeError: console.logd is not a function
// This is safe avenue.
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Clearly, it was our intentional typo.

throwing Custom Errors

It is important to note that exceptions thrown at the try block is caught by only the catch block of the same construct. We'll come to this in the next two sections below. Exceptions thrown in the catch block itself and in the finally block are not accessible from the catch block of the same construct.

We can throw custom errors with JavaScript's throw method, and even if there is perfect code written after the throw, the later code won't be run because the control has moved to the catch block already:

try {
  console.log('We are exploring error handling with try/catch/finally');
  throw Error('We wanted this Error just to make a point.');
  console.log('Perfect code here. But does not run.');
} catch(e) {
  console.log(`${e.name}: ${e.message}`);
};

console.log('This is safe avenue.');

// We are exploring error handling with try/catch/finally
// Error: We wanted this Error just to make a point.
// This is safe avenue.
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Here, the "perfect code" statement did not get logged to the console, because try spewed Error before that and control already moved to catch.

Nested try/catch Blocks

We can nest try/catch blocks. Let's see how errors interact between nesting levels:

try {
  console.log('We are exploring error handling with try/catch/finally');
  try {
    console.log('This is second level try/catch block.')
    throw Error('Custom error thrown from second level.');
  } catch(e) {
    console.log(`${e.name}: ${e.message}`);
  }
} catch(e) {
  console.log(`Error from first level:\n"${e}"`);
};

console.log('This is safe avenue.');

// We are exploring error handling with try/catch/finally
// This is second level try/catch block.
// Error: Custom error thrown from second level.
// This is safe avenue.
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In the above snippet, the custom error thrown in the nested try block is caught in the catch block of the same construct. That is, it remains in the same level.

Rethrowing

We can rethrow an error in a nested try/catch block, and it will be picked by an ancestor try/catch block:

try {
  console.log('We are exploring error handling with try/catch/finally');
  try {
    console.log('This is second level try/catch block.')
    throw Error('Custom error thrown from second level.');
  } catch(e) {
    throw(e);
  }
} catch(e) {
  console.log(`Error from first level:\n"${e}"`);
};

console.log('This is safe avenue.');
/* We are exploring error handling with try/catch/finally
   This is second level try/catch block.
   Error from first level:
   "Error: Custom error thrown from second level."
   This is safe avenue.
*/
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In the above chunk, we rethrew e with throw(e) inside the catch block of the child try/catch block. It was picked up by the catch block of the parent try/catch section:

/* Error from first level:
   "Error: Custom error thrown from second level."
*/
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These are most of the "gotchas" of using the catch block.


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The finally Block

The finally {...} block - if applied - is the block where the control flow moves before it exits the try/catch/finally or try/finally construct. It contains code that is part of the standard set of procedures, such as closing the write stream of a file regardless of whether an attempted write operation throws an error or not:

const fs = require("fs");
const writeStream = fs.createWriteStream("nodeFsTest");

try {
  console.log('Starting writing...');
  writeStream.write("Hi,");
  writeStream.write("\nThis is finally in action.");
} catch(e) {
  console.log(e);
} finally {
  console.log('Closing file...')
  writeStream.end();
}

/*
Starting writing...
Closing file...
*/
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In the example above, we're writing to a file using Node.js fs module. After a successful write operation, we want to declare that we have ended writing by closing the write stream with writeStream.end().

try/finally Only

We could have only used a try/finally block, only if we knew we won't run into errors:

const fs = require("fs");
const writeStream = fs.createWriteStream("nodeFsTest");

try {
  console.log('Starting writing...');
  writeStream.write("Hi,");
  writeStream.write("\nThis is finally in action.");
} finally {
  console.log('Closing file...')
  writeStream.end();
}

/*
Starting writing...
Closing file...
*/
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Conclusion

In this article, we discussed in depth about graceful error handling in JavaScript using the try/catch/finally construct. We found out that putting our error-prone code inside a try {...} block allows us to catch any thrown exception. This prevents our program from crashing.

We also saw that try/catch blocks can be nested, exceptions thrown in nested try/catch blocks can be rethrown and picked from ancestor try/catch blocks.

Later, we looked into the details of how the finally {..} block is used to conduct routine procedures, regardless of whether the main operation in the try block throws an error or not.

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