Implementing API Exceptions
===========================

It's very common to implement RESTful APIs on top of Flask.  One of the
first things that developers run into is the realization that the builtin
exceptions are not expressive enough for APIs and that the content type of
:mimetype:`text/html` they are emitting is not very useful for API consumers.

The better solution than using ``abort`` to signal errors for invalid API
usage is to implement your own exception type and install an error handler
for it that produces the errors in the format the user is expecting.

Simple Exception Class
----------------------

The basic idea is to introduce a new exception that can take a proper
human readable message, a status code for the error and some optional
payload to give more context for the error.

This is a simple example::

    from flask import jsonify

    class InvalidUsage(Exception):
        status_code = 400

        def __init__(self, message, status_code=None, payload=None):
            Exception.__init__(self)
            self.message = message
            if status_code is not None:
                self.status_code = status_code
            self.payload = payload

        def to_dict(self):
            rv = dict(self.payload or ())
            rv['message'] = self.message
            return rv

A view can now raise that exception with an error message.  Additionally
some extra payload can be provided as a dictionary through the `payload`
parameter.

Registering an Error Handler
----------------------------

At that point views can raise that error, but it would immediately result
in an internal server error.  The reason for this is that there is no
handler registered for this error class.  That however is easy to add::

    @app.errorhandler(InvalidUsage)
    def handle_invalid_usage(error):
        response = jsonify(error.to_dict())
        response.status_code = error.status_code
        return response

Usage in Views
--------------

Here is how a view can use that functionality::

    @app.route('/foo')
    def get_foo():
        raise InvalidUsage('This view is gone', status_code=410)