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Promise javascript examples
Promises are becoming a fundamental part of javascript. Hence, it is necessary to understand promises thoroughly. When I was learning promises, I could not find many examples which I could run in the browser’s console. The aim of this article is to
- Provide simple examples which you can run in your browser’s console
- Demonstrate the flow of promise execution
3 states of a promise
A Promise will always be in one of three states:- pending: This is the initial state when it is just created.
- fulfilled: This indicates that the operation that the promised wrapped completed successfully
- rejected: This indicates that the operation that the promise wrapped had failed
We will simulate a resolved promise using the
Promise.resolve()
and Promise.reject()
method. It can be replace with asynchronous operation.
If the promise has already been fulfilled or rejected when a corresponding handler is attached, the handler will be called, so there is no race condition between an asynchronous operation completing and its handlers being attached.[wpgist id="e22dea9b95b0cbbc4261" file="promise-1.js"] [wpgist id="e22dea9b95b0cbbc4261" file="promise-2.js"]
As the Promise.prototype.then() and Promise.prototype.catch() methods return promises, they can be chained—an operation called composition.
Promise.resolve
Examples ofPromise.resolve()
with return statements.
Promise.resolve() returns Promise object that is resolved with the given value. Promise.reject() returns a Promise object that is rejected with the given reason.That was pretty straightforward. But promises also support chaining. You can pass a value to the next function in the promise chain using return statements. This is probably how you will find yourself using promises a lot in your own projects. [wpgist id="e22dea9b95b0cbbc4261" file="promise-3.js"] [wpgist id="e22dea9b95b0cbbc4261" file="promise-4.js"] [wpgist id="e22dea9b95b0cbbc4261" file="promise-5.js"] Things become a little more interesting when you return promises from within promises. [wpgist id="e22dea9b95b0cbbc4261" file="promise-6.js"] In the above case, the inner promise of the first then block must get resolved before the success handler of the last then block can execute.
Promise.reject
Repeat the similar exercise forPromise.reject()
callback flows. I would encourage you to try the exercise with Promise.reject()
on your own and observe the behavior and come back to this article to compare your exercise.
[wpgist id="e22dea9b95b0cbbc4261" file="promise-9.js"]
When a promise is rejected and there is no error handler, none of the consecutive success handlers in the chain are invoked until a failure handler is encountered.
[wpgist id="e22dea9b95b0cbbc4261" file="promise-10.js"]
Here’s another example where you just have a catch function at the end of the chain. This behaves very similar to a finally clause.
[wpgist id="e22dea9b95b0cbbc4261" file="promise-11.js"]
Once a promise failure is handled, subsequence items in the chain can proceed as normal. For example
[wpgist id="e22dea9b95b0cbbc4261" file="promise-12.js"]
Special Case
In the examples above, you’ve seen that when you return something from within a then block, the next success handler receives that value. There is only one special case under which this fact does not hold true, and that is when the argument to then is null. In such cases, the first then block in the promise chain that has a function as a handler receives the value. Normally, this is what happens [wpgist id="e22dea9b95b0cbbc4261" file="promise-7.js"] But when you interleave then’s with null callbacks, the behaviour changes slightly [wpgist id="e22dea9b95b0cbbc4261" file="promise-8.js"]Also Read:
- JavaScript Promises - Visualized
- es6 iterators and iterables - creating custom iterators
- Why use javascript strict mode
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