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Basic JavaScript

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JavaScript fetch API

fetch() is the modern way to request data from a server

fetch() is asynchronous and returns a promise

Modern apps use async code to get data

fetch() is the most common example

fetch Returns a Promise

fetch() does not return the data.

It returns a promise that becomes a response later.

Example

fetch("data.json")
.then(function(response) {
  console.log(response);
});

The result is a Response object, not the JSON data.


Getting JSON Data

To get JSON, you must read the response body.

response.json() returns a promise.

Example

fetch("data.json")
.then(function(response) {
  return response.json();
})
.then(function(data) {
  console.log(data);
});

Note

The above is a promise chain.


fetch with async and await

async and await make fetch code easier to read.

This is the recommended way for beginners.

Example

async function loadData() {
  let response = await fetch("data.json");
  let data = await response.json();
  console.log(data);
}

loadData();

Important: HTTP Errors

A common beginner mistake is expecting fetch to fail on 404 or 500.

Fetch only rejects on network errors.

A 404 response is not a rejected promise.

You must check response.ok.

Example

async function loadData() {
  let response = await fetch("missing.json");

  if (!response.ok) {
    console.log("HTTP Error:", response.status);
    return;
  }

  let data = await response.json();
  console.log(data);
}

loadData();

Note

The above handles HTTP errors correctly.


Network Errors

A network error happens when the request cannot be completed.

This includes offline mode and DNS errors.

Network errors reject the promise.

Example

async function loadData() {
  try {
    let response = await fetch("data.json");
    let data = await response.json();
    console.log(data);
  } catch (error) {
    console.log("Network error");
  }
}

Common fetch Mistakes

Forgetting await gives you a promise instead of data.

Example

async function loadData() {
  let response = await fetch("data.json");
  let data = response.json();
  console.log(data);
}

This logs a promise.

You must use await to get the JSON.

Example

async function loadData() {
  let response = await fetch("data.json");
  let data = await response.json();
  console.log(data);
}

Debugging Tip

If fetch is not working, check the console.

Then check the Network tab.

  • Is the file path correct.
  • Is the status code 200.
  • Is the response JSON.

Note

Most fetch bugs are not JavaScript bugs.

They are path and response problems.


Callback vs Fetch

Loading data.json Using a Callback

function loadFile(callback) {
  let xhr = new XMLHttpRequest();
  xhr.open("GET", "data.json", true);
  xhr.onload = function() {
    if (xhr.status === 200) {
      callback(null, JSON.parse(xhr.responseText));
    } else {
      callback("HTTP Error: " + xhr.status, null);
    }
  };
  xhr.onerror = function() {
    callback("Network Error", null);
  };
  xhr.send();
}

loadFile(function(error, data) {
  if (error) {
    console.log(error);
    return;
  }
  console.log(data);
});

Callback Explained

  • loadFile() does not return the data
  • It accepts a callback
  • The callback runs when the file is loaded
  • Errors must be handled manually
  • Nesting increases if you add more steps

Loading data.json Using Fetch

async function loadFile() {
  try {
    let response = await fetch("data.json");

    if (!response.ok) {
      throw new Error("HTTP Error: " + response.status);
    }

    let data = await response.json();
    console.log(data);
  } catch (error) {
    console.log(error);
  }
}

loadFile();

Fetch Explained

  • fetch() returns a promise
  • await pauses inside the function
  • Errors are handled with try...catch
  • The flow reads top to bottom
  • No nested callbacks

Main Differences

CallbackPromise / async-await
You pass a function to run laterYou wait for a promise
Manual error-first patternBuilt-in error flow
Can become nestedReads like normal code
Hard to chain stepsEasy to chain steps

Next Chapter

The next page shows how to debug async code like a professional.

You will learn breakpoints, logging patterns, and why async errors feel invisible.

Debugging Asynchronous JavaScript


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