diff --git a/1-js/11-async/04-promise-error-handling/article.md b/1-js/11-async/04-promise-error-handling/article.md index b467d5e0f2..ad7be2439b 100644 --- a/1-js/11-async/04-promise-error-handling/article.md +++ b/1-js/11-async/04-promise-error-handling/article.md @@ -60,7 +60,7 @@ new Promise((resolve, reject) => { new Promise((resolve, reject) => { *!* reject(new Error("Whoops!")); -*/!* +*/!* }).catch(alert); // Error: Whoops! ``` @@ -98,7 +98,7 @@ The final `.catch` not only catches explicit rejections, but also occasional err As we already noticed, `.catch` at the end of the chain is similar to `try..catch`. We may have as many `.then` handlers as we want, and then use a single `.catch` at the end to handle errors in all of them. -In a regular `try..catch` we can analyze the error and maybe rethrow it if can't handle. The same thing is possible for promises. +In a regular `try..catch` we can analyze the error and maybe rethrow it if it can't be handled. The same thing is possible for promises. If we `throw` inside `.catch`, then the control goes to the next closest error handler. And if we handle the error and finish normally, then it continues to the closest successful `.then` handler.