Fetch – the wrong way
fetch
in JavaScript is awesome.
But, you may have something like this sprinkled throughout your code:
const res = await fetch('/user')
const user = await res.json()
While nice and simple, this code has a number of issues.
You could say “oh, yeah, handle errors”, and rewrite it like this:
try {
const res = await fetch('/user')
const user = await res.json()
} catch (err) {
// Handle the error
}
That is an improvement, certainly, but still has issues.
Here, we’re assuming user
is in fact a user object… but that assumes that we got a 200
response.
But fetch
does not throw errors for non-200 statuses, so you could have actually received a 400
(bad request), 401
(not authorized), 404
(not found), 500
(internal server error), or all kinds of other issues.
A safer, but uglier way
So, we could make another update:
try {
const res = await fetch('/user')
if (!res.ok) {
switch (res.status) {
case 400: /* Handle */ break
case 401: /* Handle */ break
case 404: /* Handle */ break
case 500: /* Handle */ break
}
}
// User *actually* is the user this time
const user = await res.json()
} catch (err) {
// Handle the error
}
Now, we’ve finally achieved a pretty good usage of fetch
. But this can be a bit clunky to have to remember to write out every time, and you’d have to hope everyone on your team is handling each of these situations every time.
It also isn’t the most elegant in terms of control flow. In terms of readability, I personally prefer the problematic code at the beginning of this article (in some ways). It read pretty cleanly – fetch the user, parse to json, do things with user object.
But in this format we have fetch the user, handle a bunch of error cases pare the json, handle other error cases etc. It’s a little jarring, especially when at this point we have error handling both above and below our business logic, as opposed to centralized in one place.
A less ugly way
A more elegant solution could be to throw
if the request has problems, as opposed to handling errors in multiple places:
try {
const res = await fetch('/user')
if (!res.ok) {
throw new Error('Bad fetch response')
}
// User *actually* is the user this time
const user = await res.json()
} catch (err) {
// Handle the error
}
But we’re left with one last problem – when it comes time to handle the error, we’ve lost a lot of useful context. We can’t actually access res
in the catch block, so at the time of processing the error we don’t actually know what the status code or body of the response was.
This will make it hard to know the best action to take, as well as leave us with very uninformative logs.
An improved solution here could be to create your own custom error class, where you can forward the response details:
class ResponseError extends Error {
constructor(message, res) {
super(message)
this.response = res
}
}
try {
const res = await fetch('/user')
if (!res.ok) {
throw new ResponseError('Bad fetch response', res)
}
const user = await res.json()
} catch (err) {
// Handle the error, with full access to status and body
switch (err.response.status) {
case 400: /* Handle */ break
case 401: /* Handle */ break
case 404: /* Handle */ break
case 500: /* Handle */ break
}
}
Now, when we preserve the status codes, we can be much smarter about the error handling.
For instance, we can alert the user on a 500
that we had an issue, and to potentially try again or contact our support.
Or if the status is 401
, they are currently unauthorized and may need to log in again, etc.
Creating a wrapper
I’ve got one last issue with our latest and greatest solution – it still depends on the developer to write a decent bit of boilerplate every time. Making changes project-wide, or enforcing that we always use this structure, can still be a challenge.
That’s where we can wrap fetch to handle things as we need:
class ResponseError extends Error {
constructor(message, res) {
this.response = res
}
}
export async function myFetch(...options) {
const res = await fetch(...options)
if (!res.ok) {
throw new ResponseError('Bad fetch response', res)
}
return res
}
And then we can use it as follows:
try {
const res = await myFetch('/user')
const user = await res.json()
} catch (err) {
// Handle issues via error.response.*
}
In our final example, it would be good to ensure we have a unified way that we handle errors. This may include alerts to users, logging, etc.
Open source solutions
Exploring this was fun and all, but it’s important to keep in mind that you don’t always have to create your own wrappers for things. Here are some preexisting options that are popular and may be worth using, including some that are under 1kb in size:
Axios
Axios is a very popular option for data fetching in JS, which handles several of the above scenarios for us automatically.
try {
const { data } = await axios.get('/user')
} catch (err) {
// Handle issues via error.response.*
}
My only critique of Axios is it is surprisingly large for a simple data fetching wrapper. So if kb size is a priority for you (which I’d argue it generally should be to keep your performance top notch), you may want to check out one of the below two options:
Redaxios
If you love Axios, but don’t love that it’ll add 11kb to your bundle, Redaxios is a great alternative, that uses the same API as Axios, but in less than 1kb.
import axios from 'redaxios'
// use as you would normally
Wretch
One newer option, which is a very thin wrapper around Fetch much like Redaxios, is Wretch. Wretch is unique in that it largely still feels like fetch, but gives you helpful methods for handling common statuses which can chain together nicely:
const user = await wretch("/user")
.get()
// Handle error cases in a more human-readable way
.notFound(error => { /* ... */ })
.unauthorized(error => { /* ... */ })
.error(418, error => { /* ... */ })
.res(response => /* ... */)
.catch(error => { /* uncaught errors */ })
Don’t forget to write data safely, too
Last but not least, let’s not forget that using fetch
directly can have common pitfalls when sending data via a POST
, PUT
, or PATCH
Can you spot the bug in this code?
// 🚩 We have at least one bug here, can you spot it?
const res = await fetch('/user', {
method: 'POST',
body: { name: 'Steve Sewell', company: 'Builder.io' }
})
There is at least one, but likely two.
First, if we are sending JSON, the body
property must be a JSON-serialized string:
const res = await fetch('/user', {
method: 'POST',
// ✅ We must JSON-serialize this body
body: JSON.stringify({ name: 'Steve Sewell', company: 'Builder.io' })
})
That can be easy to forget, but if we are using TypeScript this can at least be caught for us automatically.
An additional bug, which TypeScript will not catch for us, is that we are not specifying the Content-Type
header here. Many backends require you to specify this, as they will not process the body properly otherwise.
const res = await fetch('/user', {
headers: {
// ✅ If we are sending serialized JSON, we should set the Content-Type:
'Content-Type': 'application/json'
},
method: 'POST',
body: JSON.stringify({ name: 'Steve Sewell', company: 'Builder.io' })
})
Now, we have a relatively robust and safe solution.
(Optionally) Adding automatic JSON support to our wrapper
We could decide to add some safety for these common situations in our wrapper as well. For instance with the below code:
const isPlainObject = value => value?.constructor === Object
export async function myFetch(...options) {
let initOptions = options[1]
// If we specified a RequestInit for fetch
if (initOptions?.body) {
// If we have passed a body property and it is a plain object or array
if (Array.isArray(initOptions.body) || isPlainObject(initOptions.body)) {
// Create a new options object serializing the body and ensuring we
// have a content-type header
initOptions = {
...initOptions,
body: JSON.stringify(initOptions.body),
headers: {
'Content-Type': 'application/json',
...initOptions.headers
}
}
}
}
const res = await fetch(...initOptions)
if (!res.ok) {
throw new ResponseError('Bad fetch response', res)
}
return res
}
And now we can just use our wrapper like so:
const res = await myFetch('/user', {
method: 'POST',
body: { name: 'Steve Sewell', company: 'Builder.io' }
})
Simple and safe. I like.
Open source solutions
While it is fun and interesting to define our own abstractions, let’s make sure to point out how a couple popular open source projects also handle these situations for us automatically:
Axios/Redaxios
For Axios and Redaxios, code similar to our original “flawed” code with raw fetch
actually works as expected:
const res = await axios.post('/user', {
name: 'Steve Sewell', company: 'Builder.io'
})
Wretch
Similarly, with Wretch, the most basic example works as expected as well:
const res = await wretch('/user').post({
name: 'Steve Sewell', company: 'Builder.io'
})
(Optionally) Making our wrapper type-safe
Last, but not least, if you want to implement your own wrapper around fetch
, let’s at least make sure it is type-safe with TypeScript if that is what you are using (and hopefully you are!).
Here is our final code, including type definitions:
const isPlainObject = (value: unknown) => value?.constructor === Object
class ResponseError extends Error {
response: Response
constructor(message: string, res: Response) {
super(message)
this.response = res
}
}
export async function myFetch(input: RequestInfo | URL, init?: RequestInit): Promise<Response> {
let initOptions = init
// If we specified a RequestInit for fetch
if (initOptions?.body) {
// If we have passed a body property and it is a plain object or array
if (Array.isArray(initOptions.body) || isPlainObject(initOptions.body)) {
// Create a new options object serializing the body and ensuring we
// have a content-type header
initOptions = {
...initOptions,
body: JSON.stringify(initOptions.body),
headers: {
"Content-Type": "application/json",
...initOptions.headers,
},
}
}
}
const res = await fetch(input, initOptions)
if (!res.ok) {
throw new ResponseError("Bad response", res)
}
return res
}
One last gotcha
When using our shiny new type-safe fetch wrapper, you will run into one last issue. In a catch
block in typescript, by default error
is of any
type
try {
const res = await myFetch
} catch (err) {
// 🚩 Doh, error is of `any` type, so we missed the below typo:
if (err.respons.status === 500) ...
}
You could say, oh! I’ll just type the error:
try {
const res = await myFetch
} catch (err: ResponseError) {
// 🚩 TS error 1196: Catch clause variable type annotation must be 'any' or 'unknown' if specified
}
Ugh, that’s right, we can’t type errors in TypeScript. That’s because technically you can throw
anything in TypeScript, anywhere. The below is all valid JavaScript/TypeScript and could theoretically exist in any try
block
throw null
throw { hello: 'world' }
throw 123
// ...
Not to mention that fetch
itself could throw it’s own error that is not a ResponseError
, for example for network errors such as no connection being available.
We could also accidentally have a legitimate bug in on our fetch wrapper that throws other errors like a TypeError
So a final, clean, and type-safe usage of this wrapper, would be something like:
try {
const res = await myFetch
const user = await res.body()
} catch (err: unknown) {
if (err instanceof ResponseError) {
// Nice and type-safe!
switch (err.response.status) { ... }
} else {
throw new Error('An unknown error occured when fetching the user', {
cause: err
})
}
Here, we can check with instanceof
if err
is a ResponseError
instance, and get full type safety within the conditional block for the error response.
And then we can also re-throw an error if any unexpected errors occured, and use the new cause property in JavaScript to forward the original error details for nicer debugging.
Reusable error handling
Finally, it may be nice to not always have to have a custom built switch
for every possible error status for each HTTP call.
It would be nice to encapsulate our error handling into a reusable function, that we can use as a fallback after we handle any one-off cases we know we want special logic for that is unique to this call.
For instance, we may have a common way we want to alert users of a 500 with an “oops, sorry, please contact support” message, or for a 401 a “please log in again” message, as long as there is not a more specific way we want to handle this status for this particular request.
This, in practice, could for example look like:
try {
const res = await myFetch('/user')
const user = await res.body()
} catch (err) {
if (err instanceof ResponseError) {
if (err.response.status === 404) {
// Special logic unique to this call where we want to handle this status,
// like to say on a 404 that we seem to not have this user
return
}
}
// ⬇️ Handle anything else that we don't need special logic for, and just want
// our default handling
handleError(err)
return
}
Which we could implement like:
export function handleError(err: unkown) {
// Safe to our choice of logging service
saveToALoggingService(err);
if (err instanceof ResponseError) {
switch (err.response.status) {
case 401:
// Prompt the user to log back in
showUnauthorizedDialog()
break;
case 500:
// Show user a dialog to apologize that we had an error and to
// try again and if that doesn't work contact support
showErrorDialog()
break;
default:
// Show
throw new Error('Unhandled fetch response', { cause: err })
}
}
throw new Error('Unknown fetch error', { cause: err })
}
With Wretch
This is one place I think Wretch shines, as the above code could similarly look like:
try {
const res = await wretch.get('/user')
.notFound(() => { /* Special not found logic */ })
const user = await res.body()
} catch (err) {
// Catch anything else with our default handler
handleError(err);
return;
}
With Axios/Redaxios
With Axios or Redaxios, things look similar to our original example
try {
const { data: user } = await axios.get('/user')
} catch (err) {
if (axios.isAxiosError(err)) {
if (err.response.status === 404) {
// Special not found logic
return
}
}
// Catch anything else with our default handler
handleError(err)
return
}
Conclusion
And there we have it!
If not otherwise clear, I would personally recommend using an off the shelf wrapper for fetch, as they can be very small (1-2kb), and generally have more documentation, testing, and community in place, besides being already proven and verified by others as an effective solution.
But all of this said, whether you choose to manually use fetch
, write your own wrapper, or use an open source wrapper – for the sake of your users and your team, please be sure to fetch your data properly 🙂
About me
Hi! I’m Steve, CEO of Builder.io.
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