https://stackoverflow.com/questions/5

express - how to add a simple generic exception handler?
Jan 21, 2019 13:08
No problem :)
Jan 21, 2019 13:08
which is built for async/await. Might be better in handling such cases but i'm not sure.
Jan 21, 2019 13:08
Well for the sake of mentioning it there's koa.js as well
Jan 21, 2019 13:08
I understand.
Jan 21, 2019 13:07
If that's what you want to avoid, I can't help you. I'm not sure how you would be able to do that (apart from overwriting app()).
Jan 21, 2019 13:06
You would need to wrap every route in try/catch tho.
Jan 21, 2019 13:06
you don't need to repeat try{...}catch{res.status(500).send('Something broke!')} for every route.
Jan 21, 2019 13:06
that's how next works.
Jan 21, 2019 13:06
you mean try{...}catch{ next(true) }
Jan 21, 2019 13:05
yeah gotcha;
Jan 21, 2019 13:03
I was a bit too pedantic on saying "you should use next". What I meant is that you should have error-handling on a case-by-case basis.
Jan 21, 2019 13:01
If you plan to always send HTTP 500 errors no matter what the issue is, then sure a generic error handler will work OK I guess.
Jan 21, 2019 13:00
*to an HTTP status I mean. Sorry no edit feature on this chat.
Jan 21, 2019 13:00
My point is that each individual request needs to be error aware. There are (probably) different exceptions for each request, which need to be appropriately mapped to an error.
Jan 21, 2019 12:59
Does this make sense?
Jan 21, 2019 12:58
My point is that Express JS code needs to map errors from your controllers to HTTP status errors. It's frowned upon to say the least to throw HTTP errors from within your business-logic code.
Jan 21, 2019 12:57
Just 500?
Jan 21, 2019 12:57
So you don't plan on sending back 404, 400, 503 etc?
Jan 21, 2019 12:56
How about "handled: errors (and appropriate response)
Jan 21, 2019 12:55
with your generic error handler?
Jan 21, 2019 12:55
How do you expect to send different status errors for each case?
Jan 21, 2019 12:54
Let me ask you a question
Jan 21, 2019 12:54
Hey there
 
Apr 19, 2018 00:34
I've just run your fiddle on a 2013 iMac with a 6x slowdown factor and it doesn't lag at all. If you still think the GIF is better, go ahead and use it. There's not much left to optimise as far as I can see.
Apr 19, 2018 00:34
Only if you add a working fiddle that lags. Your posted examples don't run as-is. Fix them so they at least run and I'll give it a go.
Apr 19, 2018 00:34
As far as requestAnimationFrame is concerned you can fallback to setInterval if a device doesn't support it. Or you could just fallback to your GIF.
Apr 19, 2018 00:34
Or you could just go ahead and use this little gem: lazylinepainter.info. You can argue that it's more fun/educating to give it a go yourself but hey.. This is using the dash-array technique that Robert mentioned.
Apr 19, 2018 00:34
The reason your GIF looks great is because it's a simple series of pixel frames. There are no high-level computations that need to take place to draw the next frame. Furthermore GIF frames are animated properly in contrast with your unoptimised attempt at animating. Again, use requestAnimationFrame. I'm almost willing to bet that's what's causing the choppiness.
Apr 19, 2018 00:34
Again, use requestAnimationFrame instead of setTimeout. Moving $(element) outside of the function is just one part of the story. The reason it lags is because you're enqueuing animations before the browser has the chance to render the new frame. If I not mistaken that will cause those animations to eventually stack up. This is exactly what requestAnimationFrame ameliorates.
Apr 19, 2018 00:34
You're updating far too often and you're selecting items from the DOM in every cycle. Selecting DOM elements is kinda slow. Try to do this var path = $('#fullpath') outside of your cycle and then use path in your cycle.
Apr 19, 2018 00:34
@RobertLongson Isn't SMIL deprecated?
Apr 19, 2018 00:34
Also, you should ditch setTimeout in favor of requestAnimationFrame. And avoid updating stuff every 3ms. Almost all devices are capped at 60fps which leaves a minimum window of 16ms per frame. If you post a working fiddle of your current code I might be able to help you a bit.
Apr 19, 2018 00:34
Apart from the fact you're selecting DOM elements using jQuery in each cycle, which is less than ideal, I'd highly suggest you do this using HTML5 Canvas. Every object in SVG is a full-blown DOM Element. Every time you update the path handles, the browser needs to do a lot of work to update it's properties. This stands in contrast to HTML5 canvas which just deals with pixels.
 
Feb 15, 2018 15:57
@E-net should !== must - what ideaboxer is probably trying to say is that it would be beneficial to do so.
Feb 15, 2018 15:57
why is this being downvoted?
 
Nov 16, 2017 10:47
prettier < makes sense === true. You're not developing code for yourself
Nov 16, 2017 10:47
Comments advocating FP when the question is about classes are almost silly.
 

JavaScript

Topic: Anything JavaScript, ECMAScript including Node, React, ...
Sep 28, 2017 04:08
Hey Kevin
 
Oct 6, 2016 10:03
I'll post them on Twitter with my next question!
Oct 6, 2016 10:02
Really? I owe you a truckload of beers
Oct 6, 2016 10:01
see you around
Oct 6, 2016 10:00
what's your handle?
Oct 6, 2016 10:00
please
Oct 6, 2016 10:00
?
Oct 6, 2016 10:00
For building APIs
Oct 6, 2016 09:59
?
Oct 6, 2016 09:59
What were you using before
Oct 6, 2016 09:59
hah, yeah - again million thanks
Oct 6, 2016 09:55
Apart from the official docs?