Just saying, there's no need to catch all the types of errors in your script. Only catch those you expect to be thrown. For example, there's no reason to catch an EvalError if window.eval is not used in your code.
But to answer your question, it seems like your error handling function does the same thing over and over again; that is to do something about a specific error. For a more straightforward method of catching errors, you can simply use the instanceof operator in the catch block.
try{// Insert some erroneous code here...}catch(err){if(errinstanceofEvalError){/*...*/}elseif(errinstanceofInternalError){/*...*/}elseif(errinstanceofRangeError){/*...*/}elseif(errinstanceofReferenceError){/*...*/}elseif(errinstanceofSyntaxError){/*...*/}elseif(errinstanceofTypeError){/*...*/}elseif(errinstanceofURIError){/*...*/}elseif(errinstanceofError){/*Generic error...*/}else{/*Custom error...*/}}
I'd say the try-catch block is good enough for most use cases.
If you're interested, MDN has a list of all the types of errors in JavaScript. You can start diving there for error handling. If you're already familiar with other programming languages, it shouldn't be too different from what you already know.
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Just saying, there's no need to catch all the types of errors in your script. Only catch those you expect to be thrown. For example, there's no reason to catch an
EvalError
if window.eval is not used in your code.But to answer your question, it seems like your error handling function does the same thing over and over again; that is to do something about a specific error. For a more straightforward method of catching errors, you can simply use the instanceof operator in the catch block.
Or if you simply want to log the type of error you caught, you can use the Error#name instance property.
Hi. Thanks for your answer. Yes, I realized that I can use that like how you coded.
I coded this function because of errors I didn't know. In this example, I wanted to catch specific errors.
But your code looks more professional than me.
Is there any function to catch global errors in the JavaScript?
I'd say the
try-catch
block is good enough for most use cases.If you're interested, MDN has a list of all the types of errors in JavaScript. You can start diving there for error handling. If you're already familiar with other programming languages, it shouldn't be too different from what you already know.