Practice
1. What is the main purpose of error logging in a Next.js application?
easy
Solution
Step 1: Understand error logging purpose
Error logging is used to catch errors that happen during app execution.Step 2: Identify why errors are logged
Logging errors helps developers find and fix problems to improve app stability.Final Answer:
To catch and record errors for fixing issues later -> Option DQuick 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
Solution
Step 1: Review correct try...catch syntax
The correct syntax uses parentheses around the error variable in catch: catch (error).Step 2: Check logging method
console.error(error) correctly logs the error object to the console.Final Answer:
try { /* code */ } catch (error) { console.error(error) } -> Option BQuick 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
Solution
Step 1: Understand the thrown error
The code throws an Error object with message 'Failed to fetch data'.Step 2: Analyze the catch block output
console.error prints 'Error:' plus the error message, resulting in 'Error: Failed to fetch data'.Final Answer:
Error: Failed to fetch data -> Option AQuick 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
Solution
Step 1: Check catch block syntax
The catch block is missing the error parameter, so 'error' is undefined inside it.Step 2: Understand error usage
console.error(error) fails because 'error' is not declared; catch must declare it like catch (error).Final Answer:
Missing error parameter in catch block -> Option AQuick 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
Solution
Step 1: Understand production error logging needs
In production, errors should be tracked centrally to fix issues quickly.Step 2: Identify best practice
Sending errors to external services (like Sentry) plus local logging helps monitor and debug effectively.Final Answer:
Send errors to an external monitoring service and log locally -> Option CQuick 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
