Error handling patterns using wellcrafted trySync and tryAsync. Use when writing error handling code, using try-catch blocks, or working with Result types and graceful error recovery.
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Updated Jan 11, 2026, 04:33 AM
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---
name: error-handling
description: Error handling patterns using wellcrafted trySync and tryAsync. Use when writing error handling code, using try-catch blocks, or working with Result types and graceful error recovery.
---
# Error Handling with wellcrafted trySync and tryAsync
## Use trySync/tryAsync Instead of try-catch for Graceful Error Handling
When handling errors that can be gracefully recovered from, use `trySync` (for synchronous code) or `tryAsync` (for asynchronous code) from wellcrafted instead of traditional try-catch blocks. This provides better type safety and explicit error handling.
### The Pattern
```typescript
import { trySync, tryAsync, Ok, Err } from 'wellcrafted/result';
// SYNCHRONOUS: Use trySync for sync operations
const { data, error } = trySync({
try: () => {
const parsed = JSON.parse(jsonString);
return validateData(parsed); // Automatically wrapped in Ok()
},
catch: (e) => {
// Gracefully handle parsing/validation errors
console.log('Using default configuration');
return Ok(defaultConfig); // Return Ok with fallback
},
});
// ASYNCHRONOUS: Use tryAsync for async operations
await tryAsync({
try: async () => {
const child = new Child(session.pid);
await child.kill();
console.log(`Process killed successfully`);
},
catch: (e) => {
// Gracefully handle the error
console.log(`Process was already terminated`);
return Ok(undefined); // Return Ok(undefined) for void functions
},
});
// Both support the same catch patterns
const syncResult = trySync({
try: () => riskyOperation(),
catch: (error) => {
// For recoverable errors, return Ok with fallback value
return Ok('fallback-value');
// For unrecoverable errors, return Err
return ServiceErr({
message: 'Operation failed',
cause: error,
});
},
});
```
### Key Rules
1. **Choose the right function** - Use `trySync` for synchronous code, `tryAsync` for asynchronous code
2. **Always await tryAsync** - Unlike try-catch, tryAsync returns a Promise and must be awaited
3. **trySync returns immediately** - No await needed for synchronous operations
4. **Match return types** - If the try block returns `T`, the catch should return `Ok<T>` for graceful handling
5. **Use Ok(undefined) for void** - When the function returns void, use `Ok(undefined)` in the catch
6. **Return Err for propagation** - Use custom error constructors that return `Err` when you want to propagate the error
7. **CRITICAL: Wrap destructured errors with Err()** - When you destructure `{ data, error }` from tryAsync/trySync, the `error` variable is the raw error value, NOT wrapped in `Err`. You must wrap it before returning:
```typescript
// WRONG - error is just the raw TaggedError, not a Result
const { data, error } = await tryAsync({...});
if (error) return error; // TYPE ERROR: Returns TaggedError, not Result
// CORRECT - wrap with Err() to return a proper Result
const { data, error } = await tryAsync({...});
if (error) return Err(error); // Returns Err<TaggedError>
```
This is different from returning the entire result object:
```typescript
// This is also correct - userResult is already a Result type
const userResult = await tryAsync({...});
if (userResult.error) return userResult; // Returns the full Result
```
### Examples
```typescript
// SYNCHRONOUS: JSON parsing with fallback
const { data: config } = trySync({
try: () => JSON.parse(configString),
catch: (e) => {
console.log('Invalid config, using defaults');
return Ok({ theme: 'dark', autoSave: true });
},
});
// SYNCHRONOUS: File system check
const { data: exists } = trySync({
try: () => fs.existsSync(path),
catch: () => Ok(false), // Assume doesn't exist if check fails
});
// ASYNCHRONOUS: Graceful process termination
await tryAsync({
try: async () => {
await process.kill();
},
catch: (e) => {
console.log('Process already dead, continuing...');
return Ok(undefined);
},
});
// ASYNCHRONOUS: File operations with fallback
const { data: content } = await tryAsync({
try: () => readFile(path),
catch: (e) => {
console.log('File not found, using default');
return Ok('default content');
},
});
// EITHER: Error propagation (works with both)
const { data, error } = await tryAsync({
try: () => criticalOperation(),
catch: (error) =>
ServiceErr({
message: 'Critical operation failed',
cause: error,
}),
});
if (error) return Err(error);
```
### When to Use trySync vs tryAsync vs try-catch
- **Use trySync when**:
- Working with synchronous operations (JSON parsing, validation, calculations)
- You need immediate Result types without promises
- Handling errors in synchronous utility functions
- Working with filesystem sync operations
- **Use tryAsync when**:
- Working with async/await operations
- Making network requests or database calls
- Reading/writing files asynchronously
- Any operation that returns a Promise
- **Use traditional try-catch when**:
- In module-level initialization code where you can't await
- For simple fire-and-forget operations
- When you're outside of a function context
- When integrating with code that expects thrown exceptions