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Minor typo fix in README.md
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README.md
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README.md
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@ -1650,7 +1650,7 @@ That's entirely different from what we saw as behavior from the `ValidationError
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So far, the default DRF behavior can get us:
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- An array.
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- A dictionarry.
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- A dictionary.
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- A specific `{"detail": "something"}` result.
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**So if we need to use the default DRF behavior, we need to take care of this inconsistency.**
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@ -1720,7 +1720,7 @@ With that, we can now have Django's `ValidationError` playing nice with DRF's ex
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This is very important and should be done as early as possible in any given project.
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This is basically agreening upon what the interface of your API errors - **How an error is going to look like as an API response?**
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This is basically agreeing upon what the interface of your API errors - **How an error is going to look like as an API response?**
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This is very project specific, you can use some of the popular APIs for inspiration:
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@ -1729,7 +1729,7 @@ This is very project specific, you can use some of the popular APIs for inspirat
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As an example, we might decide that our errors are going to look like this:
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1. `4**` and `5**` status codes for different types of errors.
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1. Each error will be a dictionarry with a single `message` key, containing the error message.
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1. Each error will be a dictionary with a single `message` key, containing the error message.
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```json
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{
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@ -2027,7 +2027,7 @@ We are going to propose an approach, that can be easily extended into something
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The `extra` key can hold arbitrary data, for the purposes of passing information to the frontend.
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For example, whenerver we have a `ValidationError` (usually coming from a Serializer or a Model), we are going to present the error like that:
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For example, whenever we have a `ValidationError` (usually coming from a Serializer or a Model), we are going to present the error like that:
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```json
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{
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@ -2580,7 +2580,7 @@ def email_send(self, email_id):
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As you can see, we do a bunch of retries and if all of them fail, we handle this in the `on_failure` callback.
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The callback follows the naming pattern of `_{task_name}_failuire` and it calls the service layer, just like an ordinary task.
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The callback follows the naming pattern of `_{task_name}_failure` and it calls the service layer, just like an ordinary task.
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### Configuration
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