StandardError.js

StandardError.js is a tiny JavaScript library that simplifies creating subclasses of Error for custom error classes with the correct name and stack property. Saves you from writing a few lines of boilerplate.

Tour

Installing

npm install standard-error

Using

Just require StandardError.js and either use it directly or inherit from it for your custom error class.

Throwing StandardError

Like Error, StandardError takes a message argument, but in addition to that, you may give it an object with other properties to be set:

var StandardError = require("standard-error")
throw new StandardError("Not Found", {code: 404})

The thrown instance of StandardError will then have both the message and the code property.
It'll also also have a name property set to "StandardError".

You can skip the explicit message argument and give everything as an object of properties:

new StandardError({message: "Not Found", code: 404})

Note: All properties besides stack will be enumerable for easier serialization with JSON.stringify. That includes the name property which will be set from the constructor's name (defaults to "StandardError").

Subclassing and inheriting from StandardError

The real benefit of StandardError.js comes from subclassing it to create new error classes and adding custom behavior to them.

Let's create an HttpError that we can instantiate with the HTTP status code (new HttpError(404)) and have it set the message automatically based on that:

var Http = require("http")
var StandardError = require("standard-error")

function HttpError(code, msg) {
  StandardError.call(this, msg || Http.STATUS_CODES[code], {code: code})
}

HttpError.prototype = Object.create(StandardError.prototype, {
  constructor: {value: HttpError, configurable: true, writable: true}
})

Note that you must set the constructor property like in the above example. First, that's the proper way to subclass in JavaScript and second, StandardError.js depends on that to know which functions to skip in the stack trace.

Name

StandardError.js finds out the name (err.name) of your subclassed error from its constructor function. However, if you minify your code, you can also set or change it explicitly:

ChildError.prototype.name = "FallacyError"

Adding behavior to your subclass of StandardError

Now that you've inherited, you can, for example, customize stringifying by overwriting toString on your subclass. To get new HttpError(404) to print itself as 404 Not Found:

HttpError.prototype.toString = function() {
  return this.code + " " + this.message
}

License

StandardError.js is released under a Lesser GNU Affero General Public License, which in summary means:

For more convoluted language, see the LICENSE file.

About

Andri Möll typed this and the code.
Monday Calendar supported the engineering work.

If you find StandardError.js needs improving, please don't hesitate to type to me now at andri@dot.ee or create an issue online.