Antigravity-awesome-skills fp-errors
Stop throwing everywhere - handle errors as values using Either and TaskEither for cleaner, more predictable code
git clone https://github.com/sickn33/antigravity-awesome-skills
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/sickn33/antigravity-awesome-skills "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/plugins/antigravity-awesome-skills/skills/fp-errors" ~/.claude/skills/sickn33-antigravity-awesome-skills-fp-errors-b8dca6 && rm -rf "$T"
plugins/antigravity-awesome-skills/skills/fp-errors/SKILL.mdPractical Error Handling with fp-ts
This skill teaches you how to handle errors without try/catch spaghetti. No academic jargon - just practical patterns for real problems.
The core idea: Errors are just data. Instead of throwing them into the void and hoping someone catches them, return them as values that TypeScript can track.
When to Use
- You need to replace exception-heavy code with
orEither
.TaskEither - The task involves validation, domain errors, or clearer error contracts in TypeScript.
- You want pragmatic fp-ts error-handling guidance for real application code.
1. Stop Throwing Everywhere
The Problem with Exceptions
Exceptions are invisible in your types. They break the contract between functions.
// What this function signature promises: function getUser(id: string): User // What it actually does: function getUser(id: string): User { if (!id) throw new Error('ID required') const user = db.find(id) if (!user) throw new Error('User not found') return user } // The caller has no idea this can fail const user = getUser(id) // Might explode!
You end up with code like this:
// MESSY: try/catch everywhere function processOrder(orderId: string) { let order try { order = getOrder(orderId) } catch (e) { console.error('Failed to get order') return null } let user try { user = getUser(order.userId) } catch (e) { console.error('Failed to get user') return null } let payment try { payment = chargeCard(user.cardId, order.total) } catch (e) { console.error('Payment failed') return null } return { order, user, payment } }
The Solution: Return Errors as Values
import * as E from 'fp-ts/Either' import { pipe } from 'fp-ts/function' // Now TypeScript KNOWS this can fail function getUser(id: string): E.Either<string, User> { if (!id) return E.left('ID required') const user = db.find(id) if (!user) return E.left('User not found') return E.right(user) } // The caller is forced to handle both cases const result = getUser(id) // result is Either<string, User> - error OR success, never both
2. The Result Pattern (Either)
Either<E, A> is simple: it holds either an error (E) or a value (A).
= error caseLeft
= success case (think "right" as in "correct")Right
import * as E from 'fp-ts/Either' // Creating values const success = E.right(42) // Right(42) const failure = E.left('Oops') // Left('Oops') // Checking what you have if (E.isRight(result)) { console.log(result.right) // The success value } else { console.log(result.left) // The error } // Better: pattern match with fold const message = pipe( result, E.fold( (error) => `Failed: ${error}`, (value) => `Got: ${value}` ) )
Converting Throwing Code to Either
// Wrap any throwing function with tryCatch const parseJSON = (json: string): E.Either<Error, unknown> => E.tryCatch( () => JSON.parse(json), (e) => (e instanceof Error ? e : new Error(String(e))) ) parseJSON('{"valid": true}') // Right({ valid: true }) parseJSON('not json') // Left(SyntaxError: ...) // For functions you'll reuse, use tryCatchK const safeParseJSON = E.tryCatchK( JSON.parse, (e) => (e instanceof Error ? e : new Error(String(e))) )
Common Either Operations
import * as E from 'fp-ts/Either' import { pipe } from 'fp-ts/function' // Transform the success value const doubled = pipe( E.right(21), E.map(n => n * 2) ) // Right(42) // Transform the error const betterError = pipe( E.left('bad'), E.mapLeft(e => `Error: ${e}`) ) // Left('Error: bad') // Provide a default for errors const value = pipe( E.left('failed'), E.getOrElse(() => 0) ) // 0 // Convert nullable to Either const fromNullable = E.fromNullable('not found') fromNullable(user) // Right(user) if exists, Left('not found') if null/undefined
3. Chaining Operations That Might Fail
The real power comes from chaining. Each step can fail, but you write it as a clean pipeline.
Before: Nested Try/Catch Hell
// MESSY: Each step can fail, nested try/catch everywhere function processUserOrder(userId: string, productId: string): Result | null { let user try { user = getUser(userId) } catch (e) { logError('User fetch failed', e) return null } if (!user.isActive) { logError('User not active') return null } let product try { product = getProduct(productId) } catch (e) { logError('Product fetch failed', e) return null } if (product.stock < 1) { logError('Out of stock') return null } let order try { order = createOrder(user, product) } catch (e) { logError('Order creation failed', e) return null } return order }
After: Clean Chain with Either
import * as E from 'fp-ts/Either' import { pipe } from 'fp-ts/function' // Each function returns Either<Error, T> const getUser = (id: string): E.Either<string, User> => { ... } const getProduct = (id: string): E.Either<string, Product> => { ... } const createOrder = (user: User, product: Product): E.Either<string, Order> => { ... } // Chain them together - first error stops the chain const processUserOrder = (userId: string, productId: string): E.Either<string, Order> => pipe( getUser(userId), E.filterOrElse( user => user.isActive, () => 'User not active' ), E.chain(user => pipe( getProduct(productId), E.filterOrElse( product => product.stock >= 1, () => 'Out of stock' ), E.chain(product => createOrder(user, product)) ) ) ) // Or use Do notation for cleaner access to intermediate values const processUserOrder = (userId: string, productId: string): E.Either<string, Order> => pipe( E.Do, E.bind('user', () => getUser(userId)), E.filterOrElse( ({ user }) => user.isActive, () => 'User not active' ), E.bind('product', () => getProduct(productId)), E.filterOrElse( ({ product }) => product.stock >= 1, () => 'Out of stock' ), E.chain(({ user, product }) => createOrder(user, product)) )
Different Error Types? Use chainW
type ValidationError = { type: 'validation'; message: string } type DbError = { type: 'db'; message: string } const validateInput = (id: string): E.Either<ValidationError, string> => { ... } const fetchFromDb = (id: string): E.Either<DbError, User> => { ... } // chainW (W = "wider") automatically unions the error types const process = (id: string): E.Either<ValidationError | DbError, User> => pipe( validateInput(id), E.chainW(validId => fetchFromDb(validId)) )
4. Collecting Multiple Errors
Sometimes you want ALL errors, not just the first one. Form validation is the classic example.
Before: Collecting Errors Manually
// MESSY: Manual error accumulation function validateForm(form: FormData): { valid: boolean; errors: string[] } { const errors: string[] = [] if (!form.email) { errors.push('Email required') } else if (!form.email.includes('@')) { errors.push('Invalid email') } if (!form.password) { errors.push('Password required') } else if (form.password.length < 8) { errors.push('Password too short') } if (!form.age) { errors.push('Age required') } else if (form.age < 18) { errors.push('Must be 18+') } return { valid: errors.length === 0, errors } }
After: Validation with Error Accumulation
import * as E from 'fp-ts/Either' import * as NEA from 'fp-ts/NonEmptyArray' import { sequenceS } from 'fp-ts/Apply' import { pipe } from 'fp-ts/function' // Errors as a NonEmptyArray (always at least one) type Errors = NEA.NonEmptyArray<string> // Create the applicative that accumulates errors const validation = E.getApplicativeValidation(NEA.getSemigroup<string>()) // Validators that return Either<Errors, T> const validateEmail = (email: string): E.Either<Errors, string> => !email ? E.left(NEA.of('Email required')) : !email.includes('@') ? E.left(NEA.of('Invalid email')) : E.right(email) const validatePassword = (password: string): E.Either<Errors, string> => !password ? E.left(NEA.of('Password required')) : password.length < 8 ? E.left(NEA.of('Password too short')) : E.right(password) const validateAge = (age: number | undefined): E.Either<Errors, number> => age === undefined ? E.left(NEA.of('Age required')) : age < 18 ? E.left(NEA.of('Must be 18+')) : E.right(age) // Combine all validations - collects ALL errors const validateForm = (form: FormData) => sequenceS(validation)({ email: validateEmail(form.email), password: validatePassword(form.password), age: validateAge(form.age) }) // Usage validateForm({ email: '', password: '123', age: 15 }) // Left(['Email required', 'Password too short', 'Must be 18+']) validateForm({ email: 'a@b.com', password: 'longpassword', age: 25 }) // Right({ email: 'a@b.com', password: 'longpassword', age: 25 })
Field-Level Errors for Forms
interface FieldError { field: string message: string } type FormErrors = NEA.NonEmptyArray<FieldError> const fieldError = (field: string, message: string): FormErrors => NEA.of({ field, message }) const formValidation = E.getApplicativeValidation(NEA.getSemigroup<FieldError>()) // Now errors know which field they belong to const validateEmail = (email: string): E.Either<FormErrors, string> => !email ? E.left(fieldError('email', 'Required')) : !email.includes('@') ? E.left(fieldError('email', 'Invalid format')) : E.right(email) // Easy to display in UI const getFieldError = (errors: FormErrors, field: string): string | undefined => errors.find(e => e.field === field)?.message
5. Async Operations (TaskEither)
For async operations that can fail, use
TaskEither. It's like Either but for promises.
= a function that returnsTaskEither<E, A>Promise<Either<E, A>>- Lazy: nothing runs until you execute it
import * as TE from 'fp-ts/TaskEither' import { pipe } from 'fp-ts/function' // Wrap any async operation const fetchUser = (id: string): TE.TaskEither<Error, User> => TE.tryCatch( () => fetch(`/api/users/${id}`).then(r => r.json()), (e) => (e instanceof Error ? e : new Error(String(e))) ) // Chain async operations - just like Either const getUserPosts = (userId: string): TE.TaskEither<Error, Post[]> => pipe( fetchUser(userId), TE.chain(user => fetchPosts(user.id)) ) // Execute when ready const result = await getUserPosts('123')() // Returns Either<Error, Post[]>
Before: Promise Chain with Error Handling
// MESSY: try/catch mixed with promise chains async function loadDashboard(userId: string) { try { const user = await fetchUser(userId) if (!user) throw new Error('User not found') let posts, notifications, settings try { [posts, notifications, settings] = await Promise.all([ fetchPosts(user.id), fetchNotifications(user.id), fetchSettings(user.id) ]) } catch (e) { // Which one failed? Who knows! console.error('Failed to load data', e) return null } return { user, posts, notifications, settings } } catch (e) { console.error('Failed to load user', e) return null } }
After: Clean TaskEither Pipeline
import * as TE from 'fp-ts/TaskEither' import { sequenceS } from 'fp-ts/Apply' import { pipe } from 'fp-ts/function' const loadDashboard = (userId: string) => pipe( fetchUser(userId), TE.chain(user => pipe( // Parallel fetch with sequenceS sequenceS(TE.ApplyPar)({ posts: fetchPosts(user.id), notifications: fetchNotifications(user.id), settings: fetchSettings(user.id) }), TE.map(data => ({ user, ...data })) ) ) ) // Execute and handle both cases pipe( loadDashboard('123'), TE.fold( (error) => T.of(renderError(error)), (data) => T.of(renderDashboard(data)) ) )()
Retry Failed Operations
import * as T from 'fp-ts/Task' import * as TE from 'fp-ts/TaskEither' import { pipe } from 'fp-ts/function' const retry = <E, A>( task: TE.TaskEither<E, A>, attempts: number, delayMs: number ): TE.TaskEither<E, A> => pipe( task, TE.orElse((error) => attempts > 1 ? pipe( T.delay(delayMs)(T.of(undefined)), T.chain(() => retry(task, attempts - 1, delayMs * 2)) ) : TE.left(error) ) ) // Retry up to 3 times with exponential backoff const fetchWithRetry = retry(fetchUser('123'), 3, 1000)
Fallback to Alternative
// Try cache first, fall back to API const getUserData = (id: string) => pipe( fetchFromCache(id), TE.orElse(() => fetchFromApi(id)), TE.orElse(() => TE.right(defaultUser)) // Last resort default )
6. Converting Between Patterns
Real codebases have throwing functions, nullable values, and promises. Here's how to work with them.
From Nullable to Either
import * as E from 'fp-ts/Either' import * as O from 'fp-ts/Option' // Direct conversion const user = users.find(u => u.id === id) // User | undefined const result = E.fromNullable('User not found')(user) // From Option const maybeUser: O.Option<User> = O.fromNullable(user) const eitherUser = pipe( maybeUser, E.fromOption(() => 'User not found') )
From Throwing Function to Either
// Wrap at the boundary const safeParse = <T>(schema: ZodSchema<T>) => (data: unknown): E.Either<ZodError, T> => E.tryCatch( () => schema.parse(data), (e) => e as ZodError ) // Use throughout your code const parseUser = safeParse(UserSchema) const result = parseUser(rawData) // Either<ZodError, User>
From Promise to TaskEither
import * as TE from 'fp-ts/TaskEither' // Wrap external async functions const fetchJson = <T>(url: string): TE.TaskEither<Error, T> => TE.tryCatch( () => fetch(url).then(r => r.json()), (e) => new Error(`Fetch failed: ${e}`) ) // Wrap axios, prisma, any async library const getUserFromDb = (id: string): TE.TaskEither<DbError, User> => TE.tryCatch( () => prisma.user.findUniqueOrThrow({ where: { id } }), (e) => ({ code: 'DB_ERROR', cause: e }) )
Back to Promise (Escape Hatch)
Sometimes you need a plain Promise for external APIs.
import * as TE from 'fp-ts/TaskEither' import * as E from 'fp-ts/Either' const myTaskEither: TE.TaskEither<Error, User> = fetchUser('123') // Option 1: Get the Either (preserves both cases) const either: E.Either<Error, User> = await myTaskEither() // Option 2: Throw on error (for legacy code) const toThrowingPromise = <E, A>(te: TE.TaskEither<E, A>): Promise<A> => te().then(E.fold( (error) => Promise.reject(error), (value) => Promise.resolve(value) )) const user = await toThrowingPromise(fetchUser('123')) // Throws if Left // Option 3: Default on error const user = await pipe( fetchUser('123'), TE.getOrElse(() => T.of(defaultUser)) )()
Real Scenarios
Parse User Input Safely
interface ParsedInput { id: number name: string tags: string[] } const parseInput = (raw: unknown): E.Either<string, ParsedInput> => pipe( E.Do, E.bind('obj', () => typeof raw === 'object' && raw !== null ? E.right(raw as Record<string, unknown>) : E.left('Input must be an object') ), E.bind('id', ({ obj }) => typeof obj.id === 'number' ? E.right(obj.id) : E.left('id must be a number') ), E.bind('name', ({ obj }) => typeof obj.name === 'string' && obj.name.length > 0 ? E.right(obj.name) : E.left('name must be a non-empty string') ), E.bind('tags', ({ obj }) => Array.isArray(obj.tags) && obj.tags.every(t => typeof t === 'string') ? E.right(obj.tags as string[]) : E.left('tags must be an array of strings') ), E.map(({ id, name, tags }) => ({ id, name, tags })) ) // Usage parseInput({ id: 1, name: 'test', tags: ['a', 'b'] }) // Right({ id: 1, name: 'test', tags: ['a', 'b'] }) parseInput({ id: 'wrong', name: '', tags: null }) // Left('id must be a number')
API Call with Full Error Handling
interface ApiError { code: string message: string status?: number } const createApiError = (message: string, code = 'UNKNOWN', status?: number): ApiError => ({ code, message, status }) const fetchWithErrorHandling = <T>(url: string): TE.TaskEither<ApiError, T> => pipe( TE.tryCatch( () => fetch(url), () => createApiError('Network error', 'NETWORK') ), TE.chain(response => response.ok ? TE.tryCatch( () => response.json() as Promise<T>, () => createApiError('Invalid JSON', 'PARSE') ) : TE.left(createApiError( `HTTP ${response.status}`, response.status === 404 ? 'NOT_FOUND' : 'HTTP_ERROR', response.status )) ) ) // Usage with pattern matching on error codes const handleUserFetch = (userId: string) => pipe( fetchWithErrorHandling<User>(`/api/users/${userId}`), TE.fold( (error) => { switch (error.code) { case 'NOT_FOUND': return T.of(showNotFoundPage()) case 'NETWORK': return T.of(showOfflineMessage()) default: return T.of(showGenericError(error.message)) } }, (user) => T.of(showUserProfile(user)) ) )
Process List Where Some Items Might Fail
import * as A from 'fp-ts/Array' import * as E from 'fp-ts/Either' import { pipe } from 'fp-ts/function' interface ProcessResult<T> { successes: T[] failures: Array<{ item: unknown; error: string }> } // Process all, collect successes and failures separately const processAllCollectErrors = <T, R>( items: T[], process: (item: T) => E.Either<string, R> ): ProcessResult<R> => { const results = items.map((item, index) => pipe( process(item), E.mapLeft(error => ({ item, error, index })) ) ) return { successes: pipe(results, A.filterMap(E.toOption)), failures: pipe( results, A.filterMap(r => E.isLeft(r) ? O.some(r.left) : O.none) ) } } // Usage const parseNumbers = (inputs: string[]) => processAllCollectErrors(inputs, input => { const n = parseInt(input, 10) return isNaN(n) ? E.left(`Invalid number: ${input}`) : E.right(n) }) parseNumbers(['1', 'abc', '3', 'def']) // { // successes: [1, 3], // failures: [ // { item: 'abc', error: 'Invalid number: abc', index: 1 }, // { item: 'def', error: 'Invalid number: def', index: 3 } // ] // }
Bulk Operations with Partial Success
import * as TE from 'fp-ts/TaskEither' import * as T from 'fp-ts/Task' import { pipe } from 'fp-ts/function' interface BulkResult<T> { succeeded: T[] failed: Array<{ id: string; error: string }> } const bulkProcess = <T>( ids: string[], process: (id: string) => TE.TaskEither<string, T> ): T.Task<BulkResult<T>> => pipe( ids, A.map(id => pipe( process(id), TE.fold( (error) => T.of({ type: 'failed' as const, id, error }), (result) => T.of({ type: 'succeeded' as const, result }) ) ) ), T.sequenceArray, T.map(results => ({ succeeded: results .filter((r): r is { type: 'succeeded'; result: T } => r.type === 'succeeded') .map(r => r.result), failed: results .filter((r): r is { type: 'failed'; id: string; error: string } => r.type === 'failed') .map(({ id, error }) => ({ id, error })) })) ) // Usage const deleteUsers = (userIds: string[]) => bulkProcess(userIds, id => pipe( deleteUser(id), TE.mapLeft(e => e.message) ) ) // All operations run, you get a report of what worked and what didn't
Quick Reference
| Pattern | Use When | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Creating a success | |
| Creating a failure | |
| Wrapping throwing code | |
| Converting nullable | |
| Transform success | |
| Transform error | |
| Chain operations | |
| Chain with different error type | |
| Handle both cases | |
| Extract with default | |
| Validate with error | |
| Collect all errors | Form validation |
TaskEither Equivalents
All Either operations have TaskEither equivalents:
,TE.right
,TE.leftTE.tryCatch
,TE.map
,TE.mapLeft
,TE.chainTE.chainW
,TE.fold
,TE.getOrElseTE.filterOrElse
for fallbacksTE.orElse
Summary
- Return errors as values - Use Either/TaskEither instead of throwing
- Chain with confidence -
stops at first error automaticallychain - Collect all errors when needed - Use validation applicative for forms
- Wrap at boundaries - Convert throwing/Promise code at the edges
- Match at the end - Use
to handle both cases when you're ready to actfold
The payoff: TypeScript tracks your errors, no more forgotten try/catch, clear control flow, and composable error handling.
Limitations
- Use this skill only when the task clearly matches the scope described above.
- Do not treat the output as a substitute for environment-specific validation, testing, or expert review.
- Stop and ask for clarification if required inputs, permissions, safety boundaries, or success criteria are missing.