| name | error-handling-patterns |
| description | Master error handling patterns across languages including exceptions, Result types, error propagation, and graceful degradation to build resilient applications. Use when implementing error handling, designing APIs, or improving application reliability. |
Error Handling Patterns
Build resilient applications with robust error handling strategies that gracefully handle failures and provide excellent debugging experiences.
When to Use This Skill
- Implementing error handling in new features
- Designing error-resilient APIs
- Debugging production issues
- Improving application reliability
- Creating better error messages for users and developers
- Implementing retry and circuit breaker patterns
- Handling async/concurrent errors
- Building fault-tolerant distributed systems
Core Concepts
1. Error Handling Philosophies
Exceptions vs Result Types:
- Exceptions: Traditional try-catch, disrupts control flow
- Result Types: Explicit success/failure, functional approach
- Error Codes: C-style, requires discipline
- Option/Maybe Types: For nullable values
When to Use Each:
- Exceptions: Unexpected errors, exceptional conditions
- Result Types: Expected errors, validation failures
- Panics/Crashes: Unrecoverable errors, programming bugs
2. Error Categories
Recoverable Errors:
- Network timeouts
- Missing files
- Invalid user input
- API rate limits
Unrecoverable Errors:
- Out of memory
- Stack overflow
- Programming bugs (null pointer, etc.)
Detailed patterns and worked examples
Detailed pattern documentation lives in references/details.md. Read that file when the navigation tier above is insufficient.
Best Practices
- Fail Fast: Validate input early, fail quickly
- Preserve Context: Include stack traces, metadata, timestamps
- Meaningful Messages: Explain what happened and how to fix it
- Log Appropriately: Error = log, expected failure = don't spam logs
- Handle at Right Level: Catch where you can meaningfully handle
- Clean Up Resources: Use try-finally, context managers, defer
- Don't Swallow Errors: Log or re-throw, don't silently ignore
- Type-Safe Errors: Use typed errors when possible
def process_order(order_id: str) -> Order:
"""Process order with comprehensive error handling."""
try:
if not order_id:
raise ValidationError("Order ID is required")
order = db.get_order(order_id)
if not order:
raise NotFoundError("Order", order_id)
try:
payment_result = payment_service.charge(order.total)
except PaymentServiceError as e:
logger.error(f"Payment failed for order {order_id}: {e}")
raise ExternalServiceError(
f"Payment processing failed",
service="payment_service",
details={"order_id": order_id, "amount": order.total}
) from e
order.status = "completed"
order.payment_id = payment_result.id
db.save(order)
return order
except ApplicationError:
raise
except Exception as e:
logger.exception(f"Unexpected error processing order {order_id}")
raise ApplicationError(
"Order processing failed",
code="INTERNAL_ERROR"
) from e
Common Pitfalls
- Catching Too Broadly:
except Exception hides bugs
- Empty Catch Blocks: Silently swallowing errors
- Logging and Re-throwing: Creates duplicate log entries
- Not Cleaning Up: Forgetting to close files, connections
- Poor Error Messages: "Error occurred" is not helpful
- Returning Error Codes: Use exceptions or Result types
- Ignoring Async Errors: Unhandled promise rejections