# Exceptions > Exceptions… allow error handling to be organized cleanly in a central or high-level place within the program structure. > > — Doug Hellmann, [Python Exception Handling Techniques][cite] ## Exception handling in REST framework views REST framework's views handle various exceptions, and deal with returning appropriate error responses. The handled exceptions are: * Subclasses of `APIException` raised inside REST framework. * Django's `Http404` exception. * Django's `PermissionDenied` exception. In each case, REST framework will return a response with an appropriate status code and content-type. The body of the response will include any additional details regarding the nature of the error. By default all error responses will include a key `details` in the body of the response, but other keys may also be included. For example, the following request: DELETE http://api.example.com/foo/bar HTTP/1.1 Accept: application/json Might recieve an error response indicating that the `DELETE` method is not allowed on that resource: HTTP/1.1 405 Method Not Allowed Content-Type: application/json; charset=utf-8 Content-Length: 42 {"detail": "Method 'DELETE' not allowed."} ## APIException **Signature:** `APIException(detail=None)` The **base class** for all exceptions raised inside REST framework. To provide a custom exception, subclass `APIException` and set the `.status_code` and `.detail` properties on the class. ## ParseError **Signature:** `ParseError(detail=None)` Raised if the request contains malformed data when accessing `request.DATA` or `request.FILES`. By default this exception results in a response with the HTTP status code "400 Bad Request". ## PermissionDenied **Signature:** `PermissionDenied(detail=None)` Raised when an incoming request fails the permission checks. By default this exception results in a response with the HTTP status code "403 Forbidden". ## MethodNotAllowed **Signature:** `MethodNotAllowed(method, detail=None)` Raised when an incoming request occurs that does not map to a handler method on the view. By default this exception results in a response with the HTTP status code "405 Method Not Allowed". ## UnsupportedMediaType **Signature:** `UnsupportedMediaType(media_type, detail=None)` Raised if there are no parsers that can handle the content type of the request data when accessing `request.DATA` or `request.FILES`. By default this exception results in a response with the HTTP status code "415 Unsupported Media Type". ## Throttled **Signature:** `Throttled(wait=None, detail=None)` Raised when an incoming request fails the throttling checks. By default this exception results in a response with the HTTP status code "429 Too Many Requests". [cite]: http://www.doughellmann.com/articles/how-tos/python-exception-handling/index.html