# Exceptions Exceptions can be thrown from within request handlers and will automatically be handled by Sanic. Exceptions take a message as their first argument, and can also take a status code to be passed back in the HTTP response. ## Throwing an exception To throw an exception, simply `raise` the relevant exception from the `sanic.exceptions` module. ```python from sanic.exceptions import ServerError @app.route('/killme') def i_am_ready_to_die(request): raise ServerError("Something bad happened", status_code=500) ``` ## Handling exceptions To override Sanic's default handling of an exception, the `@app.exception` decorator is used. The decorator expects a list of exceptions to handle as arguments. You can pass `SanicException` to catch them all! The decorated exception handler function must take a `Request` and `Exception` object as arguments. ```python from sanic.response import text from sanic.exceptions import NotFound @app.exception(NotFound) def ignore_404s(request, exception): return text("Yep, I totally found the page: {}".format(request.url)) ``` ## Useful exceptions Some of the most useful exceptions are presented below: - `NotFound`: called when a suitable route for the request isn't found. - `ServerError`: called when something goes wrong inside the server. This usually occurs if there is an exception raised in user code. See the `sanic.exceptions` module for the full list of exceptions to throw. **Previous:** [Middleware](middleware.html) **Next:** [Blueprints](blueprints.html)