I am building a react-native app, and I am starting to implement a more robust and sophisticated error-handling system, specifically for handling server errors when making http requests. Here is a basic example of how I am currently making http requests in my app.
I have a 'client.js' file which is essentially just a wrapper around axios. I have a 'get' method that looks like this:
const get = async (endpoint, config = {}) => {
try {
const result = await axios.get(domain + endpoint, config);
return result;
} catch (error) {
throw new Error(error.message);
}
};
Then, I have a file for each api endpoint that I need to access. For example, I have a 'posts.js' file, and in that file I have a 'getPosts' method:
const getPosts = async (userID, page, pageSize) => {
try {
const response = await client.get(
`${endpoint}?userID=${userID}&page=${page}&pageSize=${pageSize}`
);
return response.data;
} catch (error) {
throw new Error(error.message);
}
};
And then finally, in the component that is calling getPosts, I have a function that looks something like this:
const loadPosts = async () => {
try {
const response = await getPosts();
// do something with the response from the server
} catch (error) {
// display an error message to the client
}
}
Obviously this is a very simple example of what a request might look like, but this is the basic structure that I use throughout my app. The problem I am having is that it seems very repetitive and messy to have to wrap almost all of my functions in a try/catch block, and then basically raise an error object until I get to the function that is actually going to handle the error. Is there some sort of 'design method' for error handling that simplifies and centralizes this process? Perhaps something similar to an express-middleware when creating a node server? Or is this a standard way to handle errors in javascript?
Thank you to anyone who can help!