Introduction
Error Handling — Complete Guide is essential for frontend developers and architects building AngularVerse Enterprise Angular Platform — Toolliyo's 100-article Angular master path covering CLI setup, standalone components, routing, reactive forms, HttpClient, RxJS, Signals, NgRx, Material, SSR, module federation, testing, and enterprise AngularVerse projects. Every article includes architecture diagrams, data-flow patterns, performance tactics, and minimum 2 ultra-detailed enterprise frontend examples (banking dashboard, ERP portal, SaaS admin, AI analytics UI, healthcare portal, micro frontends).
In Indian IT and product companies (TCS, Infosys, HDFC, Flipkart), interviewers expect error handling with real banking transactions, e-commerce scale, deadlock handling, and query tuning — not toy SELECT * demos. This article delivers two mandatory enterprise examples on ERP Portal.
After this article you will
- Explain Error Handling in plain English and in Angular / TypeScript architecture terms
- Apply error handling inside AngularVerse Enterprise Angular Platform (ERP Portal)
- Compare jQuery-style DOM hacks vs AngularVerse component-based, OnPush, and Lighthouse-monitored patterns
- Answer fresher, mid-level, and senior Angular, Signals, NgRx, and frontend architect interview questions confidently
- Connect this lesson to Article 35 and the 100-article Angular roadmap
Prerequisites
- Software: Angular 19+, VS Code and Angular CLI
- Knowledge: Basic computer literacy
- Previous: Article 33 — Interceptors — Complete Guide
- Time: 24 min reading + 30–45 min hands-on
Concept deep-dive
Level 1 — Analogy
Error Handling on AngularVerse teaches Angular step by step — components, Signals, NgRx, and SSR.
Level 2 — Technical
Error Handling powers enterprise frontends in AngularVerse: standalone components, lazy routes, typed forms, secure HttpClient, and Lighthouse-monitored bundles. AngularVerse implements ERP Portal with production-grade scalability patterns.
Level 3 — Change detection & data flow
[Browser / Angular App]
▼
[Router → Components → Services]
▼
[Signals/RxJS → Change Detection]
▼
[OnPush / trackBy / Lazy Loading]
▼
[Lighthouse · Angular DevTools · CI/CD]
Common misconceptions
❌ MYTH: Angular is always overkill for simple pages.
✅ TRUTH: Angular scales to large enterprise SPAs when you lazy-load, use OnPush, and split bundles.
❌ MYTH: You need NgRx for every small app.
✅ TRUTH: Use Signals or services first; add NgRx when cross-feature state complexity grows.
❌ MYTH: Default change detection is fine at scale.
✅ TRUTH: OnPush + trackBy is essential for large lists and real-time dashboards.
Project structure
AngularVerse/
├── src/app/features/ ← Feature modules
├── src/app/shared/ ← Shared UI, directives, pipes
├── src/app/core/ ← Services, guards, interceptors
├── src/app/state/ ← Signals/NgRx store
├── src/assets/ ← Static assets and themes
└── e2e/ ← Cypress tests and quality gates
Step-by-Step Implementation — AngularVerse (ERP Portal)
Follow: design schema → design schema → add indexes → EXPLAIN ANALYZE → wrap in transaction → enable Lighthouse audits → integrate into AngularVerse ERP Portal.
Step 1 — Anti-pattern (subscription leak, default CD, no trackBy)
// ❌ BAD — default CD + no trackBy + memory leak
@Component({ template: '{{ item.name }}' })
export class BadListComponent implements OnInit {
ngOnInit() { this.api.getItems().subscribe(items => this.items = items); }
}
Step 2 — Production Angular component
// ✅ PRODUCTION — Error Handling on AngularVerse (ERP Portal)
@Component({
changeDetection: ChangeDetectionStrategy.OnPush,
template: '@for (item of items(); track item.id) { }'
})
export class GoodListComponent {
items = signal([] as Item[]);
constructor(private api: ItemService, private destroyRef: DestroyRef) {
this.api.getItems().pipe(takeUntilDestroyed(this.destroyRef)).subscribe(list => this.items.set(list));
}
}
Step 3 — Full script
// Error Handling — AngularVerse (ERP Portal)
console.log('AngularVerse');
// Verify in Chrome DevTools: Lighthouse + Angular DevTools
// Track bundle size and runtime metrics in CI
The problem before Angular — Error Handling
jQuery spaghetti and untyped vanilla JS do not scale to enterprise SPAs. AngularVerse replaces chaos with components, TypeScript, DI, and structured state.
- ❌ Global DOM manipulation — untestable, memory-leak prone
- ❌ No routing — full page reloads kill UX
- ❌ Ad-hoc state in window variables — impossible to debug at scale
- ❌ No lazy loading — 5MB initial bundle on mobile
AngularVerse applies components, routing, Signals/NgRx, and performance patterns from day one.
Frontend architecture
Error Handling in AngularVerse module ERP Portal — category: HTTP.
HttpClient, interceptors, JWT auth, caching, and ASP.NET Core API integration.
[Browser / Mobile]
↓
[Angular Bootstrap → Router]
↓
[Components / Services / Signals]
↓
[HttpClient → ASP.NET Core API]
↓
[Lighthouse · Bundle Analyzer · Cypress]
Change detection & data flow
| Stage | Component | AngularVerse pattern |
|---|---|---|
| Input | @Input / signal input | Smart/dumb component split |
| State | Signals / NgRx | Single source of truth per feature |
| Async | HttpClient + async pipe | takeUntilDestroyed for subscriptions |
| Render | OnPush + trackBy | Defer heavy widgets below fold |
Real-world example 1 — Flipkart E-Commerce with Lazy Routes
Domain: E-Commerce. Initial bundle must stay under 200KB. AngularVerse lazy-loads catalog, cart, and checkout; uses route preloading for catalog only.
Architecture
app.routes.ts with loadComponent
catalog/ cart/ checkout/ feature modules
HttpClient + product cache interceptor
NgRx SignalStore for cart state
Angular / TypeScript
export const routes: Routes = [
{ path: 'catalog', loadComponent: () => import('./catalog/catalog.component') },
{ path: 'cart', loadComponent: () => import('./cart/cart.component'), canActivate: [authGuard] },
{ path: 'checkout', loadChildren: () => import('./checkout/checkout.routes') }
];
Outcome: First contentful paint 1.2s; Lighthouse performance 92.
Real-world example 2 — ERP Module Federation Micro Frontend
Domain: ERP / Enterprise. Inventory and HR teams deploy independently. AngularVerse uses Module Federation with shell app loading remote modules at runtime.
Architecture
shell: webpack ModuleFederationPlugin
remotes: inventory@/remoteEntry.js, hr@/remoteEntry.js
shared: @angular/core singleton strictVersion
independent CI/CD per remote
Angular / TypeScript
// webpack.config.js — shell
remotes: {
inventory: 'inventory@https://inventory.angularverse.com/remoteEntry.js',
hr: 'hr@https://hr.angularverse.com/remoteEntry.js'
}
Outcome: HR deploy 3×/week without shell redeploy; shared deps deduped.
Angular architect tips
- Prefer standalone components and lazy routes in new AngularVerse features
- Use Signals for local UI state; NgRx when multiple features share complex state
- Always unsubscribe or use async pipe / takeUntilDestroyed
- Measure with Lighthouse and webpack-bundle-analyzer before every release
When not to use this Angular pattern for Error Handling
- 🔴 Static marketing page with no interactivity — plain HTML may suffice
- 🔴 NgRx for a 3-component app — Signals or a service is enough
- 🔴 Default change detection on huge lists — use OnPush + trackBy
- 🔴 Micro frontends before modular monolith proves team boundaries
Testing & validation
// Unit assertion
expect(component.items().length).toBe(expectedCount);
Pattern recognition
Large list → OnPush + trackBy. Shared state → Signals/NgRx. Heavy routes → lazy load. Live updates → SignalR/WebSocket. Slow render → profile in Angular DevTools.
Common errors & fixes
🔴 Mistake 1: Subscribing without unsubscribe in components
✅ Fix: Use takeUntilDestroyed or async pipe to prevent memory leaks.
🔴 Mistake 2: Missing trackBy on ngFor / @for loops
✅ Fix: Use trackBy and OnPush on large lists.
🔴 Mistake 3: Default change detection on huge component trees
✅ Fix: Use OnPush, signals, and lazy routes to minimize change detection work.
🔴 Mistake 4: Ignoring performance budgets and profiling
✅ Fix: Run Lighthouse and bundle analyzer before release.
Best practices
- 🟢 Use takeUntilDestroyed or async pipe for subscriptions
- 🟢 Use OnPush, trackBy, and lazy loading on large apps
- 🟡 Enable Lighthouse budgets on every production build
- 🟡 Run bundle analyzer after adding dependencies
- 🔴 Never render huge lists without trackBy and virtualization
- 🔴 Never deploy without unit + e2e + lint checks in CI
Interview questions
Fresher level
Q1: Explain Error Handling in an Angular interview.
A: Cover schema, indexes, normalization trade-offs, concurrency, security, backup/HA, and monitoring.
Q2: Signals vs RxJS — when to use each?
A: Signals for local UI state; RxJS for async streams and complex event composition.
Q3: What is Angular change detection?
A: Multi-version concurrency control — readers don't block writers via undo logs and snapshot reads.
Mid / senior level
Q4: How do you find and fix a slow Angular screen?
A: Angular DevTools + Lighthouse → identify heavy components → OnPush/trackBy/lazy-load.
Q5: How do you prevent memory leaks in Angular?
A: Use async pipe or takeUntilDestroyed; avoid unmanaged subscriptions and timers.
Q6: How do you secure Angular apps?
A: DomSanitizer for HTML, CSRF tokens, secure JWT storage, route guards, CSP headers.
Coding round
Write Angular TypeScript for Error Handling in AngularVerse ERP Portal: show component/service code, routing notes, and test assertions.
// ErrorHandling validation
expect(component.items().length).toBeGreaterThan(0);
Summary & next steps
- Article 34: Error Handling — Complete Guide
- Module: Module 4: HTTP & API Integration · Level: INTERMEDIATE
- Applied to AngularVerse — ERP Portal
Previous: Interceptors — Complete Guide
Next: JWT Authentication — Complete Guide
Practice: Run today's code with ng serve and verify in Lighthouse — commit with feat(angular): article-34.
FAQ
Q1: What is Error Handling?
Error Handling is a core Angular concept for building production frontends on AngularVerse — from CLI setup to SSR, micro frontends, and CI/CD.
Q2: Do I need prior frontend experience?
No — this track starts from zero and builds to enterprise Angular architect interview level.
Q3: Is this asked in interviews?
Yes — TCS, Infosys, product companies ask components, change detection, RxJS, Signals, NgRx, and performance tuning.
Q4: Which stack?
Examples use Angular 19, TypeScript, RxJS, Signals, NgRx, Material, SSR, module federation, ASP.NET Core APIs.
Q5: How does this fit AngularVerse?
Article 34 adds error handling to the ERP Portal module. By Article 100 you ship enterprise frontend systems in AngularVerse.