What is it?
promise-breaker
makes it easy to write functions that will accept an optional callback, or return
a Promise if a callback is not provided. You can use callbacks or Promises in your implementation,
and callers can call with either a callback or expect a Promise. It's a library that makes it easy
to write libraries for others.
Installation
npm install --save promise-breaker
Requirements
This library assumes that Promise
is a defined global variable. If this is not the case
on your platform, you can use a polyfill:
npm install --save es6-promise
Then somewhere in your node.js application:
if(!global.Promise) {
global.Promise = require('es6-promise').Promise;
}
Or in your client-side app:
if(!window.Promise) {
window.Promise = require('es6-promise').Promise;
}
If you don't want to set the global, you can pass an optional Promise implementation to
promise-breaker
:
var MyPromise = require('es6-promise').Promise;
promiseBreaker = require('promise-breaker').withPromise(MyPromise);
Summary
With the growing popularity of Promises these days, if you're a library author, it's nice to
be able to provide your clients with a library that will take an optional callback, and if the
callback isn't provided, return a Promise. If you've ever tried to do this, you know that there's
a lot of finicky boilerplate involved in every function you write. Providing callback support is
also pretty important if you prefer to write your library using Promises internally.
'promise-breaker' makes this really easy. If you prefer writing in callback style:
export function myFunc(done=null) {
return pb.addPromise(done, done =>
doThing((err, thing) => {
if(err) {return done(err);}
doOtherThing(thing, (err, otherThing) => {
if(err) {return done(err);}
done(null, otherThing);
});
});
);
}
or if you prefer Promise style:
export function myFunc(done=null) {
return pb.addCallback(done,
doThing()
.then(result => doOtherThing(result))
);
}
If you're using arrow functions or using commonjs exports, it's even easier to use
promise-breaker to create functions that generate a Promise or accept a callback:
exports.myPromiseFunc = pb.break({args: 0}, () => {
return Promise.resolve("Hello World");
});
exports.myCbFunc = pb.make({args: 1}, done => {
done(null, "Hello World");
});
The names make()
and break()
here come from the idea that you are making a callback into a promise, or breaking
a promise down into a callback. Note that make()
and break()
rely on the .length
of the function you pass
in. In ES6, default parameters do not count towards the length of the function, so you need to explicitly tell
promise-breaker how many parameters are expected in the args
parameter. If you're not using default arguments, you
can omit the options parameter altogether, but this is a bad habit, as promise-breaker unfortunately has no way to
detect if you get it wrong.
The other thing you often want to do when writing a library is call into a function without knowing whether
it returns a promise or expects a callback. Again, promise-breaker makes this easy:
export function doStuff(fn) {
pb.call(fn, null, "hello world")
.catch(err => console.log(err));
}
Or, in callback style:
export function doStuff(fn) {
pb.callWithCb(fn, null, "hello world", err => {
if(err) return console.log(err);
});
}
API
pb.make([options,] fn)
options.args
- In ES6, default parameters do not count towards a functions .length
. If your fn
uses default parameters, you must specify the total parameter count in args
. E.g.:
const myFn = pb.make({args: 2}, (x, y=null) => ...);
If you do not specify args
, then promise-breaker
will use fn.length
instead.
make()
takes a function which accepts a callback(err, result)
as its last parameter, and
returns a new function which accepts an optional callback as its last parameter. If a callback is
provided, this new function will behave exactly like the original function. If the callback
is not provided, then the new function will return a Promise.
Since Promises only allow a single value to be returned, if fn
passes more than two arguments to callback(...)
,
then (as of v3.0.0) any arguments after the error will be transformed into an array and returned via the Promise as a
single combined argument. This does not affect the case where the transformed function is called with a callback.
For example:
var myFunc = pb.make(function(callback) {
// We're returning multiple values via callback
callback(null, "a", "b");
})
// Callback style
myFunc(function(err, a, b) {...});
// Promise style
myFunc()
.then(function(results) {
// Promises only let us return a single value, so we return an array.
var a = results[0];
var b = results[1];
...
})
.catch(function(err) {...});
pb.break([options,] fn)
options.args
- In ES6, default parameters do not count towards a functions .length
. If your fn
uses default parameters, you must specify the total parameter count in args
. E.g.:
const myFn = pb.break({args: 3}, (x, y=null, done=null) => ...);
If you do not specify args
,
then promise-breaker will use fn.length
instead.
break(fn)
is the opposite of make(fn)
. fn
here is a function which returns a Promise.
break(fn)
will generate a new function with an extra parameter, an optional
callback(err, result)
. If no callback is provided, the generated function will behave exactly
like the original function. If a callback is provided, then the generated function will return
null
, and will pass any results that would have been returned via the Promise via the callback
instead.
addPromise(done, fn)
Used to add Promise support to a callback-based function.
Calls fn(cb)
. If done
is provided, it is passed directly as cb
and addPromise
returns undefined. If done
is not provided, addPromise
will generate an appropriate callback and return a Promise. If fn
is called with
more than two arguments (with multiple results, in other words) then the Promise will resolve to an array of results.
Use it like this:
export function addAsync(x, y, done=null) {
return pb.addPromise(done, done => done(null, x + y));
}
addCallback(done, promise)
Used to add callback support to a promise-based function.
If done
is not provided, returns the promise
passed in. If done
is
provided, this will wait for promise
to resolve or reject and then call
done(err, result)
appropriately. Note that promise
can also be a
function that takes no arguments and returns a Promise.
Use it like this:
export function addAsync(x, y, done=null) {
return pb.addCallback(done, Promise.resolve(x + y));
}
pb.apply(fn, thisArg, args[, cb])
Much like Function.prototype.apply()
,
this calls a function, but this lets you call into a function when you don't know whether the
function is expecting a callback or is going to return a Promise. fn
is the function you wish
to call. Under the hood, if fn.length
is equal to args.length
, this will call fn
with the parameters provided, and then return the Promise (or wrap a returned value in a Promise).
If fn.length
is args.length + 1
, then a callback will be added.
If cb
is provided, apply
will call into cb
with a result, otherwise apply
will itself
return a Promise.
pb.call(fn, thisArg[, arg1[, arg2[, ...]]))
This is the Function.prototype.call()
equivalent of apply()
. Note that this always returns a Promise. If you need a callback, use callWithCb()
instead.
Note that this is handy shortcut for promisifying a callback-based API:
pb.call(done => fs.readFile(filename, {encoding: 'utf8'}, done))
.then(fileContents => ...);
pb.callWithCb(fn, argumentCount, thisArg[, arg1[, arg2[, ...[, cb]]]])
Similar to pb.call()
, but instead of returning a Promise this will call the provided callback.
pb.withPromise(promiseImpl)
Returns a new {make, break, addPromise, addCallback, apply, call, callWithCb}
object which uses the specified
promiseImpl constructor to create new Promises.