231 lines
9.1 KiB
Markdown
231 lines
9.1 KiB
Markdown
<a href="https://promisesaplus.com/"><img src="https://promisesaplus.com/assets/logo-small.png" align="right" /></a>
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# promise
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This is a simple implementation of Promises. It is a super set of ES6 Promises designed to have readable, performant code and to provide just the extensions that are absolutely necessary for using promises today.
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For detailed tutorials on its use, see www.promisejs.org
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**N.B.** This promise exposes internals via underscore (`_`) prefixed properties. If you use these, your code will break with each new release.
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[![travis][travis-image]][travis-url]
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[![dep][dep-image]][dep-url]
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[![npm][npm-image]][npm-url]
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[![downloads][downloads-image]][downloads-url]
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[travis-image]: https://img.shields.io/travis/then/promise.svg?style=flat
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[travis-url]: https://travis-ci.org/then/promise
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[dep-image]: https://img.shields.io/david/then/promise.svg?style=flat
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[dep-url]: https://david-dm.org/then/promise
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[npm-image]: https://img.shields.io/npm/v/promise.svg?style=flat
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[npm-url]: https://npmjs.org/package/promise
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[downloads-image]: https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/promise.svg?style=flat
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[downloads-url]: https://npmjs.org/package/promise
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## Installation
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**Server:**
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$ npm install promise
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**Client:**
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You can use browserify on the client, or use the pre-compiled script that acts as a polyfill.
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```html
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<script src="https://www.promisejs.org/polyfills/promise-6.1.0.js"></script>
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```
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Note that the [es5-shim](https://github.com/es-shims/es5-shim) must be loaded before this library to support browsers pre IE9.
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```html
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<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/es5-shim/3.4.0/es5-shim.min.js"></script>
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```
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## Usage
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The example below shows how you can load the promise library (in a way that works on both client and server using node or browserify). It then demonstrates creating a promise from scratch. You simply call `new Promise(fn)`. There is a complete specification for what is returned by this method in [Promises/A+](http://promises-aplus.github.com/promises-spec/).
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```javascript
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var Promise = require('promise');
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var promise = new Promise(function (resolve, reject) {
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get('http://www.google.com', function (err, res) {
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if (err) reject(err);
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else resolve(res);
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});
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});
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```
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If you need [domains](https://nodejs.org/api/domain.html) support, you should instead use:
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```js
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var Promise = require('promise/domains');
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```
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If you are in an environment that implements `setImmediate` and don't want the optimisations provided by asap, you can use:
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```js
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var Promise = require('promise/setimmediate');
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```
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If you only want part of the features, e.g. just a pure ES6 polyfill:
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```js
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var Promise = require('promise/lib/es6-extensions');
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// or require('promise/domains/es6-extensions');
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// or require('promise/setimmediate/es6-extensions');
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```
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## Unhandled Rejections
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By default, promises silence any unhandled rejections.
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You can enable logging of unhandled ReferenceErrors and TypeErrors via:
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```js
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require('promise/lib/rejection-tracking').enable();
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```
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Due to the performance cost, you should only do this during development.
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You can enable logging of all unhandled rejections if you need to debug an exception you think is being swallowed by promises:
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```js
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require('promise/lib/rejection-tracking').enable(
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{allRejections: true}
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);
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```
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Due to the high probability of false positives, I only recommend using this when debugging specific issues that you think may be being swallowed. For the preferred debugging method, see `Promise#done(onFulfilled, onRejected)`.
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`rejection-tracking.enable(options)` takes the following options:
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- allRejections (`boolean`) - track all exceptions, not just reference errors and type errors. Note that this has a high probability of resulting in false positives if your code loads data optimisticly
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- whitelist (`Array<ErrorConstructor>`) - this defaults to `[ReferenceError, TypeError]` but you can override it with your own list of error constructors to track.
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- `onUnhandled(id, error)` and `onHandled(id, error)` - you can use these to provide your own customised display for errors. Note that if possible you should indicate that the error was a false positive if `onHandled` is called. `onHandled` is only called if `onUnhandled` has already been called.
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To reduce the chance of false-positives there is a delay of up to 2 seconds before errors are logged. This means that if you attach an error handler within 2 seconds, it won't be logged as a false positive. ReferenceErrors and TypeErrors are only subject to a 100ms delay due to the higher likelihood that the error is due to programmer error.
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## API
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Before all examples, you will need:
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```js
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var Promise = require('promise');
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```
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### new Promise(resolver)
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This creates and returns a new promise. `resolver` must be a function. The `resolver` function is passed two arguments:
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1. `resolve` should be called with a single argument. If it is called with a non-promise value then the promise is fulfilled with that value. If it is called with a promise (A) then the returned promise takes on the state of that new promise (A).
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2. `reject` should be called with a single argument. The returned promise will be rejected with that argument.
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### Static Functions
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These methods are invoked by calling `Promise.methodName`.
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#### Promise.resolve(value)
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(deprecated aliases: `Promise.from(value)`, `Promise.cast(value)`)
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Converts values and foreign promises into Promises/A+ promises. If you pass it a value then it returns a Promise for that value. If you pass it something that is close to a promise (such as a jQuery attempt at a promise) it returns a Promise that takes on the state of `value` (rejected or fulfilled).
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#### Promise.reject(value)
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Returns a rejected promise with the given value.
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#### Promise.all(array)
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Returns a promise for an array. If it is called with a single argument that `Array.isArray` then this returns a promise for a copy of that array with any promises replaced by their fulfilled values. e.g.
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```js
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Promise.all([Promise.resolve('a'), 'b', Promise.resolve('c')])
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.then(function (res) {
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assert(res[0] === 'a')
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assert(res[1] === 'b')
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assert(res[2] === 'c')
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})
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```
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#### Promise.denodeify(fn)
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_Non Standard_
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Takes a function which accepts a node style callback and returns a new function that returns a promise instead.
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e.g.
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```javascript
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var fs = require('fs')
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var read = Promise.denodeify(fs.readFile)
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var write = Promise.denodeify(fs.writeFile)
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var p = read('foo.json', 'utf8')
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.then(function (str) {
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return write('foo.json', JSON.stringify(JSON.parse(str), null, ' '), 'utf8')
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})
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```
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#### Promise.nodeify(fn)
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_Non Standard_
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The twin to `denodeify` is useful when you want to export an API that can be used by people who haven't learnt about the brilliance of promises yet.
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```javascript
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module.exports = Promise.nodeify(awesomeAPI)
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function awesomeAPI(a, b) {
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return download(a, b)
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}
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```
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If the last argument passed to `module.exports` is a function, then it will be treated like a node.js callback and not parsed on to the child function, otherwise the API will just return a promise.
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### Prototype Methods
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These methods are invoked on a promise instance by calling `myPromise.methodName`
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### Promise#then(onFulfilled, onRejected)
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This method follows the [Promises/A+ spec](http://promises-aplus.github.io/promises-spec/). It explains things very clearly so I recommend you read it.
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Either `onFulfilled` or `onRejected` will be called and they will not be called more than once. They will be passed a single argument and will always be called asynchronously (in the next turn of the event loop).
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If the promise is fulfilled then `onFulfilled` is called. If the promise is rejected then `onRejected` is called.
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The call to `.then` also returns a promise. If the handler that is called returns a promise, the promise returned by `.then` takes on the state of that returned promise. If the handler that is called returns a value that is not a promise, the promise returned by `.then` will be fulfilled with that value. If the handler that is called throws an exception then the promise returned by `.then` is rejected with that exception.
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#### Promise#catch(onRejected)
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Sugar for `Promise#then(null, onRejected)`, to mirror `catch` in synchronous code.
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#### Promise#done(onFulfilled, onRejected)
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_Non Standard_
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The same semantics as `.then` except that it does not return a promise and any exceptions are re-thrown so that they can be logged (crashing the application in non-browser environments)
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#### Promise#nodeify(callback)
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_Non Standard_
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If `callback` is `null` or `undefined` it just returns `this`. If `callback` is a function it is called with rejection reason as the first argument and result as the second argument (as per the node.js convention).
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This lets you write API functions that look like:
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```javascript
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function awesomeAPI(foo, bar, callback) {
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return internalAPI(foo, bar)
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.then(parseResult)
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.then(null, retryErrors)
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.nodeify(callback)
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}
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```
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People who use typical node.js style callbacks will be able to just pass a callback and get the expected behavior. The enlightened people can not pass a callback and will get awesome promises.
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## License
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MIT
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