cm0002@lemmy.world to Programmer Humor@programming.dev · 4 days agoYes, But...lemmy.mlimagemessage-square84fedilinkarrow-up1757arrow-down19cross-posted to: programmerhumor@lemmy.ml
arrow-up1748arrow-down1imageYes, But...lemmy.mlcm0002@lemmy.world to Programmer Humor@programming.dev · 4 days agomessage-square84fedilinkcross-posted to: programmerhumor@lemmy.ml
minus-squaremadcaesar@lemmy.worldlinkfedilinkarrow-up14arrow-down2·3 days agoHere I am preferring 200, with success boolean / message string… Iike HTTP errors codes for real fuck up’s, if I see 500 somethings fucked in the app, otherwise a standardised json response body seems way easier
minus-squarefuzzzerd@programming.devlinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up21·3 days agoWhat about both? User supplies bad input? HTTP 400 with response body json describing the error in a standard format?
minus-squarebountygiver [any]@lemmy.mllinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up7·3 days agowhen you are too lazy to ask your request library to not throw exception on non-200 responses.
minus-squaredan@upvote.aulinkfedilinkarrow-up5·3 days agoThrowing exceptions is fine since errors are an exceptional circumstance (not expected during normal use of the app), and you probably want errors to follow a different code path so that they can be logged, alerts triggered if needed, etc.
Here I am preferring 200, with success boolean / message string…
Iike HTTP errors codes for real fuck up’s, if I see 500 somethings fucked in the app, otherwise a standardised json response body seems way easier
What about both? User supplies bad input? HTTP 400 with response body json describing the error in a standard format?
when you are too lazy to ask your request library to not throw exception on non-200 responses.
Throwing exceptions is fine since errors are an exceptional circumstance (not expected during normal use of the app), and you probably want errors to follow a different code path so that they can be logged, alerts triggered if needed, etc.