When setting out to create a great developer experience, a large part of your success will depend on how your product handles the "failure path" of a developers user story.

In a usual login form, this would be something like a user typing in an incorrect username and password, but in a client library or SDK this is often when the user is providing the wrong credentials or incomplete parameters to an API call.

In this post, I will be looking at the SDKs from SendGrid, Twilio, Stripe, and Contentful to see how they handle two common errors: invalid credentials and an invalid request.

Authentication Error

One of the most common errors is the authentication error. A developer can copy the wrong credentials, or copy them partially, leading to a failure in authentication.

The Bad - SendGrid

Let's start off with an example of how a developer experience can go wrong using SendGrid's Ruby library.

require 'sendgrid-ruby' sendgrid = SendGrid : : API . new ( api_key : 'not_my_api_key' ) response = sendgrid . client . alerts . get ( ) response . parsed_body [ 0 ] [ 'id' ]

When we run this, we might be surprised to see the following surprising result.

Traceback ( most recent call last ) : script.rb:8:in ` < main > ': undefined method ` [ ] ' for nil:NilClass ( NoMethodError )

At this point, the error is being thrown on a different line than where the problem occurred, making it hard for the developer to figure out what caused the issue.

It turns out, that our invalid API call returned the following.

puts response . status_code puts response . body

In other words, the developer needs to remember to check for a valid status code before they can continue.

The Good - Twilio

Twilio does things considerably better, though not perfect.

require 'twilio-ruby' account_sid = 'my_actual_sid' client = Twilio : : REST : : Client . new account_sid , "not_my_auth_token" client . api . account . messages . list

When we run this code a Twilio::REST::TwilioError is thrown.

Traceback ( most recent call last ) : 7 : from twilio.rb:8:in ` < main > ' 6 : from /twilio-ruby-5.7.2/lib/twilio-ruby/rest/api/v2010/account/message.rb:97:in ` list ' 5: from /twilio-ruby-5.7.2/lib/twilio-ruby/rest/api/v2010/account/message.rb:127:in ` stream' 4 : from /twilio-ruby-5.7.2/lib/twilio-ruby/rest/api/v2010/account/message.rb:181:in ` page' 3 : from /twilio-ruby-5.7.2/lib/twilio-ruby/rest/api/v2010/account/message.rb:181:in ` new' 2 : from /twilio-ruby-5.7.2/lib/twilio-ruby/rest/api/v2010/account/message.rb:212:in ` initialize ' 1: from /twilio-ruby-5.7.2/lib/twilio-ruby/framework/page.rb:22:in ` initialize' /twilio-ruby-5.7.2/lib/twilio-ruby/framework/page.rb:32:in ` process_response' : Unable to fetch page ( Twilio::REST::TwilioError )

This is a lot more info that we need, so let's shorten the last line to get the bit we need. I'll shorten all future examples like this as well for our convenience.

page.rb:32:in `process_response': Unable to fetch page \ ( Twilio::REST::TwilioError )

Although an error was thrown, the error has a pretty generic name ( Twilio::REST::TwilioError ) and neither it nor it's message explain what just happened.

If we actually catch the error and print it out we get a lot more information.

begin client . api . account . messages . list rescue Twilio : : REST : : TwilioError = > error puts error end

Unable to fetch page: [ 401 ] { "code" = > 20003 , "detail" = > "Your AccountSid or AuthToken was incorrect." , "message" = > "Authenticate" , "more_info" = > "https://www.twilio.com/docs/errors/20003" , "status" = > 401 }

What's really cool here is that the API returns a link to the docs, in this case the documentation for the 20003 error which explains all the reasons why this error might be thrown.

The Great - Contentful

Contentful is a relatively new company yet their SDK does a pretty good job in this scenario.

require 'contentful' client = Contentful : : Client . new ( access_token : 'not_my_token' , space : 'not_my_space' ) client . content_types

Contentful, unlike Twilio, actually returns an error with a self-descriptive name, Contentful::Unauthorized . It also parses out the description from the API response and puts it right here in the error message.

client.rb:321:in `fail_response': HTTP status code: 401 Unauthorized ( Contentful::Unauthorized ) Message: The access token you sent could not be found or is invalid. Request ID: 420e900ce606953c660fe28899b14bb0

What I love especially is that the error uses line breaks to put the important information on the next line. As a result, the important message is not somewhere at the right end of the terminal.

Invalid Request Error

Invalid requests often happen because developers don't know what parameters to provide to an API call, or because they provide them in the wrong format. I admit even I often play with APIs by just making API calls until I get it right, omitting to read the documentation.

The Bad - SendGrid

As we saw earlier, SendGrid's SDK errors quietly even with these kinds of errors.

response = sendgrid . client . api_keys . post ( ) puts response . class puts response . status_code puts response . body puts response . body [ 'errors' ] [ 0 ] [ 'field' ]

On the upside, the response does include some details as to which parameter is missing.

The good

Stripe does a much better job, providing instructions in the message of the error as to which fields are missing.

require "stripe" Stripe . api_key = "my_api_key" Stripe : : Charge . create ( amount : 2000 )

The resulting Stripe::InvalidRequestError has a clear error name, and the description does describe what fields are missing in plain English.

stripe_client.rb:277:in `handle_error_response': Must provide source or \ customer. ( Stripe::InvalidRequestError )

The Almost Great - Twilio

I was sad to see that Twilio dropped the ball a bit here. Let me explain why.

As we saw earlier, the error response from the Twilio API returns links to the documentation. If I were to make an API call without its required parameters I'd see something like this.

curl -XPOST https://api.twilio.com/2010-04-01/Accounts/MY_SID/Messages.json \ -u 'MY_SID:MY_AUTH_TOKEN'

{ "code" : 21603 , "message" : "A 'From' phone number is required." , "more_info" : \ "https://www.twilio.com/docs/errors/21603" , "status" : 400 }

As you can see, this has a link to https://www.twilio.com/docs/errors/21603 which provides further documentation on the error.

Sadly, when we use the Ruby SDK we don't see this URL back in the error.

client . api . account . messages . create ( )

version.rb:157:in `create ': Unable to create record: A ' From' phone number \ is required. ( Twilio::REST::RestError )

I tried inspecting the Twilio::REST::RestError but it really doesn't seem to have been included. This is sad, as the previous Twilio::REST::TwilioError did seem to include the full response body, including the URL.

Conclusion

As you can see, there's a lot of different ways errors can be handles in Ruby API client libraries, and different companies have different approaches. Which one is your favourite?