I\'m trying to get a handle on the Angular $q
service and its related objects and APIs. When I look at the objects in my console I see:
var defe
1) $q.reject()
is a shortcut to create a deferred and then reject it immediately; I often use this in an errorFn if I can't handle the error.
2) Nothing, promise.catch(errorFn)
is just syntactic sugar for promise.then(null, errorFn)
, just like the success and error methods of the $http
service, so you can write code like the following:
promise.
then(function(result){
// handle success
return result;
}, function errorHandler1(error){
// handle error, exactly as if this was a separate catch in the chain.
}).catch(function errorHandler2(error){
// handle errors from errorHandler1
});
3) This is exactly where $q.reject can come in handy:
promise.
catch(function(error){
//Decide you can't handle the error
return $q.reject(error); //This forwards the error to the next error handler;
}).catch(function(error){
// Here you may handle the error or reject it again.
return 'An error occurred';
//Now other errorFn in the promise chain won't be called,
// but the successFn calls will.
}).catch(function(error){
// This will never be called because the previous catch handles all errors.
}).then(function(result){
//This will always be called with either the result of promise if it was successful, or
//'An error occured' if it wasn't
});
Ok this is my take from promises.
$q.reject(reason)
returns a rejected promise with the reason passed as argument and defered. Reject rejects an existent defered whether its process has finished or not.
errorFn
gets launched when a promise is rejected and its argument is the reason why it was rejected. Catch is called when an error inside the promise process wasn't handled properly causeing the promise to raise and exception and not being either rejected or fulfilled .
You shoudn't have nested promises, you should have chained promises in which case the latest catch block should catch everything prior to it if no other block was specified to handle it.