Error-first Callback
The pattern used across all the asynchronous methods in Node.js is called Error-first Callback. Here is an example:
fs.readFile( "foo.txt", function ( err, data ) { if ( err ) { console.error( err ); } console.log( data ); });
Any asynchronous method expects one of the arguments to be a callback. The full callback argument list depends on the caller method, but the first argument is always an error object or null. When we go for the asynchronous method, an exception thrown during function execution cannot be detected in a try
/catch
statement. The event happens after the JavaScript engine leaves the try
block. In the preceding example, if any exception is thrown during the reading of the file, it lands on the callback function as the first and mandatory parameter. Regardless of its widespread use, this approach has its flaws. While writing real code with deep callback sequences, it is easy to run into a so-called Callback Hell
(http://callbackhell...