72 lines
2.2 KiB
TypeScript

import { Observable } from '../Observable';
import { ObservableInput, OperatorFunction, MonoTypeOperatorFunction } from '../types';
/**
* Catches errors on the observable to be handled by returning a new observable or throwing an error.
*
* ![](catch.png)
*
* ## Examples
* Continues with a different Observable when there's an error
*
* ```javascript
* of(1, 2, 3, 4, 5).pipe(
* map(n => {
* if (n == 4) {
* throw 'four!';
* }
* return n;
* }),
* catchError(err => of('I', 'II', 'III', 'IV', 'V')),
* )
* .subscribe(x => console.log(x));
* // 1, 2, 3, I, II, III, IV, V
* ```
*
* Retries the caught source Observable again in case of error, similar to retry() operator
*
* ```javascript
* of(1, 2, 3, 4, 5).pipe(
* map(n => {
* if (n === 4) {
* throw 'four!';
* }
* return n;
* }),
* catchError((err, caught) => caught),
* take(30),
* )
* .subscribe(x => console.log(x));
* // 1, 2, 3, 1, 2, 3, ...
* ```
*
* Throws a new error when the source Observable throws an error
*
* ```javascript
* of(1, 2, 3, 4, 5).pipe(
* map(n => {
* if (n == 4) {
* throw 'four!';
* }
* return n;
* }),
* catchError(err => {
* throw 'error in source. Details: ' + err;
* }),
* )
* .subscribe(
* x => console.log(x),
* err => console.log(err)
* );
* // 1, 2, 3, error in source. Details: four!
* ```
*
* @param {function} selector a function that takes as arguments `err`, which is the error, and `caught`, which
* is the source observable, in case you'd like to "retry" that observable by returning it again. Whatever observable
* is returned by the `selector` will be used to continue the observable chain.
* @return {Observable} An observable that originates from either the source or the observable returned by the
* catch `selector` function.
* @name catchError
*/
export declare function catchError<T>(selector: (err: any, caught: Observable<T>) => never): MonoTypeOperatorFunction<T>;
export declare function catchError<T, R>(selector: (err: any, caught: Observable<T>) => ObservableInput<R>): OperatorFunction<T, T | R>;