DEV Community

Cover image for Exploring Error Boundary in React: Enhancing Robustness and Error Handling
Yan Levin
Yan Levin

Posted on • Updated on

Exploring Error Boundary in React: Enhancing Robustness and Error Handling

Introduction

Error handling is an essential aspect of building robust and reliable applications. In React, error boundaries serve as a mechanism to efficiently capture Javascript errors during rendering, lifecycle methods, and in constructors of the whole tree below them. Error boundaries prevent those errors from crashing the entire application and provide a way to gracefully handle failures without affecting the user experience.

What is an Error Boundary?

An error boundary is a React component that wraps around other components to catch and handle errors that occur within their subtree. It acts as a safety net, isolating errors and preventing them from propagating upwards. By doing so, it allows the rest of the application to continue running smoothly even if certain parts encounter errors.

Why Do We Need Error Boundaries?

While React already provides its own error handling mechanism, called componentDidCatch, it only works for class components and cannot capture errors in event handlers. Error boundaries, on the other hand, work with both class and function components. They help to ensure that errors, such as unexpected exceptions or network failures, don't compromise the overall stability of the application.

Example Usage

Imagine you have an application with components A. You can wrap component A with an error boundary to capture any potential errors occurring inside A and its child components. If an error occurs within A, the error boundary will catch it and display a fallback UI, which could be an error message or a custom component designed to handle the specific error gracefully.

Check out Error Boundary usage example

Custom Full Implementation of Error Boundary

To implement a custom error boundary in React, you need to create a class component that extends the base React.Component class. Within this component, you override the componentDidCatch lifecycle method to define how you want to handle the error.

Here is an example of a custom error boundary component:

class ErrorBoundary extends React.Component {
  constructor(props) {
    super(props);
    this.state = { hasError: false };
  }

  componentDidCatch(error, errorInfo) {
    // Log the error or send it to an error reporting service
    console.error(error, errorInfo);
    // Update state to show the fallback UI
    this.setState({ hasError: true });
  }

  render() {
    if (this.state.hasError) {
      // You can render any custom fallback UI
      return this.props.fallback;
    }
    return this.props.children;
  }
}

// Usage
<ErrorBoundary fallback={<span>Something went wrong</span>}>
  <ComponentA />
</ErrorBoundary>
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

There is currently no way to write an error boundary as a function component. However, you don’t have to write the error boundary class yourself. You can use react-error-boundary instead.

How do Error Boundaries Work?

Error boundaries in React serve as a special type of component that catch errors occurring in their child components during rendering, lifecycle methods, and in constructors of the whole tree below them. They act as a protective shield around the subtree of components they wrap, preventing errors from propagating upwards and crashing the entire application.

When an error occurs within an error-boundary-wrapped component, React invokes the componentDidCatch lifecycle method of the error boundary component. This method receives two parameters: error (the error object) and errorInfo (an object providing additional information about the component stack trace).

The componentDidCatch method allows you to handle the error and take appropriate action. You can log the error, display a fallback UI to the user, or render an alternative component tree to recover from the error gracefully. The error boundary component takes control of the error flow and maintains the stability of the application.

It's important to note that error boundaries in React only catch errors that occur during rendering, lifecycle methods, and in constructors of the whole tree below them.. They do not catch errors in event handlers, asynchronous code (e.g. setTimeout or requestAnimationFrame callbacks), server side rendering. To handle those types of errors, you can use other error handling techniques, such as try-catch blocks or Promise.catch().

By incorporating error boundaries into your React application, you can isolate and handle errors in a controlled manner. This enhances the robustness and reliability of your application by preventing crashes and providing a graceful way to recover from errors, ensuring a smooth user experience.

React Error-Boundary Library

React also provides a built-in library called react-error-boundary. This library offers a declarative approach by providing a higher-order component (HOC) that wraps around a component. The HOC handles the error boundary logic, allowing developers to focus on the UI and error handling strategies.
It is widely used by the React community and is considered a best practice for error handling in React applications.

npm install react-error-boundary

import { ErrorBoundary } from 'react-error-boundary';

const MyComponent = () => {
  // Your component logic here

  return (
    <ErrorBoundary fallback={<span>Something went wrong</span>}>
      {/* Component JSX code here */}
    </ErrorBoundary>
  );
};
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

Conclusion

Error boundaries in React play a crucial role in maintaining application stability by catching and handling errors within specific components. With error boundaries, you can minimize the impact of errors and provide more graceful fallback UIs to improve the overall user experience. Whether using a custom implementation or leveraging the convenience of the react-error-boundary library, incorporating error boundaries is an essential practice in building robust React applications.

Top comments (2)

Collapse
 
rishamason profile image
Risha

Oh! This is cool, dude! I like it. Thanks

Collapse
 
rajaerobinson profile image
Rajae Robinson

Very informative post.
I wrote an article recently on the top 7 most common errors in React. It's definitely worth a read