1.0.1 • Published 6 years ago

gulp-error-handle v1.0.1

Weekly downloads
2,629
License
MIT
Repository
-
Last release
6 years ago

Allows you to set single handler instead of appending .on('error', log) to each pipe.
In contrary to gulp-plumber if error occures task will stop, it is, though do not means that your watch task will stop (see example).

How to use

const errorHandler = require('gulp-error-handle');

gulp.task('build', function() {
  return gulp.src('styles/*.css')
    .pipe(errorHandler())
    .pipe(gulp.dest('build/'));
});

you can pass in function as well

const logError = function(err) {
  gutil.log(err);
  this.emit('end');
};

gulp.task('build', function() {
  return gulp.src('styles/*.css')
    .pipe(errorHandler(logError))
    .pipe(gulp.dest('build/'));
});

Note: if you're passing your own function in, you need to emit 'end' manually (if you're using plugin which already doing this, such as gulp-notify, you dont need to do this).

Example

const gulp = require('gulp');
const sass = require('gulp-sass');
const del = require('del');
const errorHandler = require('gulp-error-handle');

gulp.task('clean', () => del['build']);

gulp.task('css:build', ['clean'], function() {
  return gulp.src('styles/**/*.scss')
    .pipe(errorHandler())
    .pipe(sass())
    .pipe(gulp.dest('build/'));
});

gulp.task('watch', () => {
  gulp.watch('styles/**/*.scss', ['css:build']);
});

gulp.task('default', ['clean', 'css:build', 'watch'])