DataTableConstraintError

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Summary

Thrown when a database constraint is violated.

Signature

class DataTableConstraintError {
  constructor(
    message: string,
    options: { cause?: unknown; metadata?: Record<string, unknown> },
  ): DataTableConstraintError;

  // Properties
  cause?: unknown;
  code: string;
  message: string;
  metadata?: Record<string, unknown>;
  name: string;
  stack?: string;
  stackTraceLimit: number;

  // Methods
  captureStackTrace(targetObject: object, constructorOpt: Function): void;
  prepareStackTrace(err: Error, stackTraces: CallSite[]): any;
}

Constructor Params

message

options

Properties

cause

code

Stable error code identifying the failure category.

message

metadata

Optional structured metadata attached to the failure.

name

stack

stackTraceLimit

The Error.stackTraceLimit property specifies the number of stack frames collected by a stack trace (whether generated by new Error().stack or Error.captureStackTrace(obj)).

The default value is 10 but may be set to any valid JavaScript number. Changes will affect any stack trace captured after the value has been changed.

If set to a non-number value, or set to a negative number, stack traces will not capture any frames.

Methods

captureStackTrace(targetObject: object, constructorOpt: Function): void

Creates a .stack property on targetObject, which when accessed returns a string representing the location in the code at which Error.captureStackTrace() was called.

const myObject = {};
Error.captureStackTrace(myObject);
myObject.stack;  // Similar to `new Error().stack`

The first line of the trace will be prefixed with ${myObject.name}: ${myObject.message}.

The optional constructorOpt argument accepts a function. If given, all frames above constructorOpt, including constructorOpt, will be omitted from the generated stack trace.

The constructorOpt argument is useful for hiding implementation details of error generation from the user. For instance:

function a() {
  b();
}

function b() {
  c();
}

function c() {
  // Create an error without stack trace to avoid calculating the stack trace twice.
  const { stackTraceLimit } = Error;
  Error.stackTraceLimit = 0;
  const error = new Error();
  Error.stackTraceLimit = stackTraceLimit;

  // Capture the stack trace above function b
  Error.captureStackTrace(error, b); // Neither function c, nor b is included in the stack trace
  throw error;
}

a();

targetObject

constructorOpt

prepareStackTrace(err: Error, stackTraces: CallSite[]): any

err

stackTraces