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NextJSframework

Error logging strategies in NextJS - Performance & Optimization

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Practice

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1. What is the main purpose of error logging in a Next.js application?
easy
A. To speed up the app loading time
B. To reduce the size of the app bundle
C. To increase the app's SEO ranking
D. To catch and record errors for fixing issues later

Solution

  1. Step 1: Understand error logging purpose

    Error logging is used to catch errors that happen during app execution.
  2. Step 2: Identify why errors are logged

    Logging errors helps developers find and fix problems to improve app stability.
  3. Final Answer:

    To catch and record errors for fixing issues later -> Option D
  4. Quick Check:

    Error logging purpose = Catch and fix errors [OK]
Hint: Error logging is for catching and fixing problems [OK]
Common Mistakes:
  • Confusing error logging with performance optimization
  • Thinking error logging improves SEO
  • Believing error logging reduces app size
2. Which of the following is the correct syntax to catch and log an error in Next.js using try...catch?
easy
A. try { /* code */ } catch { console.error }
B. try { /* code */ } catch (error) { console.error(error) }
C. try (/* code */) catch (error) { console.error(error) }
D. try { /* code */ } catch error { console.log(error) }

Solution

  1. Step 1: Review correct try...catch syntax

    The correct syntax uses parentheses around the error variable in catch: catch (error).
  2. Step 2: Check logging method

    console.error(error) correctly logs the error object to the console.
  3. Final Answer:

    try { /* code */ } catch (error) { console.error(error) } -> Option B
  4. Quick Check:

    Correct try...catch syntax = try { /* code */ } catch (error) { console.error(error) } [OK]
Hint: Catch uses parentheses and console.error logs errors [OK]
Common Mistakes:
  • Omitting parentheses in catch
  • Using console.log instead of console.error
  • Incorrect try or catch block syntax
3. What will be the console output when this Next.js code runs and an error occurs?
try {
  throw new Error('Failed to fetch data')
} catch (err) {
  console.error('Error:', err.message)
}
medium
A. Error: Failed to fetch data
B. Failed to fetch data
C. Error: Error: Failed to fetch data
D. undefined

Solution

  1. Step 1: Understand the thrown error

    The code throws an Error object with message 'Failed to fetch data'.
  2. Step 2: Analyze the catch block output

    console.error prints 'Error:' plus the error message, resulting in 'Error: Failed to fetch data'.
  3. Final Answer:

    Error: Failed to fetch data -> Option A
  4. Quick Check:

    console.error prints label + error message = Error: Failed to fetch data [OK]
Hint: console.error prints label plus error.message string [OK]
Common Mistakes:
  • Confusing error object with error message string
  • Expecting double 'Error:' prefix
  • Ignoring the label string in console.error
4. Identify the error in this Next.js error logging code:
try {
  const data = await fetchData()
} catch {
  console.error(error)
}
medium
A. Missing error parameter in catch block
B. Using console.error instead of console.log
C. fetchData() should not be awaited
D. try block should not have await

Solution

  1. Step 1: Check catch block syntax

    The catch block is missing the error parameter, so 'error' is undefined inside it.
  2. Step 2: Understand error usage

    console.error(error) fails because 'error' is not declared; catch must declare it like catch (error).
  3. Final Answer:

    Missing error parameter in catch block -> Option A
  4. Quick Check:

    Catch needs error parameter to log it [OK]
Hint: Always name error in catch to use it inside [OK]
Common Mistakes:
  • Omitting error parameter in catch
  • Thinking console.error is wrong here
  • Misunderstanding async/await usage
5. In a production Next.js app, which strategy is best for error logging to ensure issues are tracked and fixed efficiently?
hard
A. Disable all error logging to improve performance
B. Only use console.error locally and ignore errors in production
C. Send errors to an external monitoring service and log locally
D. Log errors only in the browser console without server tracking

Solution

  1. Step 1: Understand production error logging needs

    In production, errors should be tracked centrally to fix issues quickly.
  2. Step 2: Identify best practice

    Sending errors to external services (like Sentry) plus local logging helps monitor and debug effectively.
  3. Final Answer:

    Send errors to an external monitoring service and log locally -> Option C
  4. Quick Check:

    Production error tracking = external service + local logs [OK]
Hint: Use external services plus local logs in production [OK]
Common Mistakes:
  • Ignoring production error tracking
  • Disabling logging to save performance
  • Logging only in browser without server monitoring