Huge News!Announcing our $40M Series B led by Abstract Ventures.Learn More
Socket
Sign inDemoInstall
Socket

righto

Package Overview
Dependencies
Maintainers
1
Versions
69
Alerts
File Explorer

Advanced tools

Socket logo

Install Socket

Detect and block malicious and high-risk dependencies

Install

righto

Wana do some async stuff? Righto..

  • 1.7.1
  • Source
  • npm
  • Socket score

Version published
Maintainers
1
Created
Source

Righto

Wana do some async stuff? Righto..

What

make caching, dependency resolving tasks

righto takes a task to run, and arguments to pass to the task. If you pass a righto'd task as an argument, it will be resolved before running the dependant task.

righto(task, [argument or righto task])

righto'd tasks are resolved once and the result is cached. If a task is in flight when it's results are asked for, the results will be passed when the task resolves.

example:

async dependencies passed to bar:


// Just your average callback-passing-style function.
function foo(callback){

    setTimeout(function(){

        callback(null, 'world');

    }, 1000);

}

// A righto callback-passing-style function
var getFoo = righto(foo);

// Another normal callback-passing-style function.
function bar(a, callback){
    callback(null, 'hello ' + a);
}

// Another righto
var getBar = righto(bar, getFoo);

getBar(function(error, result){

    // ...about 1 second later...
    result -> 'hello world';

});

API support

Callbacks

righto suports passing error-first CPS functions by default as tasks:

function foo(callback){
    setTimeout(function(){
        callback(null, 'foo');
    });
}

var eventuallyFoo = righto(getFoo);

eventuallyFoo(function(error, result){
    result === 'foo';
});

Promise

righto supports passing Promises as a dependency:

var somePromise = new Promise(function(resolve, reject){
    setTimeout(function(){
        resolve('foo');
    });
});

var someRighto = righto(function(somePromiseResult, done){
    done(null, somePromiseResult);
}, somePromise);

someRighto(function(error, result){
    result === 'foo';
});

Generators (yield)

righto supports running a generator (or any nextable iterator):

var generated = righto.iterate(function*(){
    var x = yield righto(function(done){
        setTimeout(function(){
            done(null, 'x');
        });
    });

    var y = yield righto(function(done){
        setTimeout(function(){
            done(null, 'y');
        });
    });

    return x + y;
});

generated(function(error, result){
    result === 'xy';
});

Errors

Errors bubble up through tasks, so if a dependancy errors, the task errors.


// Task that errors
function foo(callback){

    setTimeout(function(){

        callback(new Error('IT BORKED!'));

    }, 1000);

}

var getFoo = righto(foo);

function bar(a, callback){
    callback(null, 'hello ' + a);
}

var getBar = righto(bar, getFoo);

getBar(function(error, result){

    // ...about 1 second later...
    error -> IT BORKED!;

});

Multiple results

By default, dependant tasks are passed only the first result of a dependency righto. eg:

function foo(callback){
    setTimeout(function(){

        callback(null, 'first', 'second', 'third');

    }, 1000);
}

var getFoo = righto(foo);

function bar(a, callback){
    callback(null, a);
}

var getBar = righto(bar, getFoo);

getBar(function(error, result){
    // ...1 second later...
    result -> 'first';
});

But you can pick and choose what results are used from a dependancy like so:

function foo(callback){
    setTimeout(function(){

        callback(null, 'first', 'second', 'third');

    }, 1000);
}

var getFoo = righto(foo);

function bar(a, b callback){
    callback(null, [a, b].join(' '));
}

var getBar = righto(bar, [getFoo, 0, 2]); // Take result 0, and result 2, from getFoo

getBar(function(error, result){
    // ...1 second later...
    result -> 'first third';
});

All

righto.all takes N tasks, or an Array of tasks as the first argument, resolves them all in parallel, and results in an Array of results.


var task1 = righto(function(done){
    setTimeout(function(){
        done(null, 'a');
    }, 1000);
});

var task2 = righto(function(done){
    setTimeout(function(){
        done(null, 'b');
    }, 1000);
});

var task3 = righto(function(done){
    setTimeout(function(){
        done(null, 'c');
    }, 1000);
});

var all = righto.all([task1, task2, task3]);

all(function(error, results){
    results; // -> ['a','b','c']
});

Value (passing resolveables as unresolved arguments)

Sometimes it may be required to pass a resolveable (a righto, or promise) without as an argument, rather than passing the resolved value of the resolvable. you can do this using righto.value(resolvable)

var righto1 = righto(function(done){
        done(null, 5);
    });

var rightoValue = righto.value(righto1);

var righto2 = righto(function(value, done){
        // value === righto1

        value(function(error, x){
            // x === 5;
        });

    }, rightoValue);

righto2();

Subkeys

You can create a new righto that resolves the key/runs a function on a result like so:

var user = righto(getUser);

var userName = user.get('name');
// OR: Use a function
var userName = user.get(user => user.name);

userName(function(error, name){
    // error or userName.
});

And keys can be righto's as well:

var user = righto(getUser);
var userKey = righto(getKey);

var userName = user.get(userKey);

userName(function(error, something){
    // error or something.
});

Possible rightos: righto.from(anything)

Any value can be turned into a righto using righto.from();

var num = righto.from(1); // -> righto:number;
var string = righto.from('hello'); // -> righto:string;
var nothing = righto.from(null); // -> righto:null;
var anyValue = righto.from(anything); // -> righto:anything;

var self = righto.from(someRighto); // -> someRighto;

Resolve

Resolves an object to a new object where any righto values are resolved:

var foo = righto(function(callback){
    asyncify(function(){
        callback(null, 'foo');
    });
});

//                            recursively resolve child objects
//                                            V
var bar = righto.resolve({foo: {bar: foo}}, true);

bar(function(error, bar){
    bar; // -> {foo: {bar: 'foo'}}
});

All

You may want to run several tasks in parallel.

For this, you can use righto.all.

function getStuff(callback){
    // eventually...
    callback(null, 3);
}
var stuff = righto(getStuff);

function getOtherStuff(callback){
    // eventually...
    callback(null, 7);
}
var otherStuff = righto(getOtherStuff);

var stuffInParallelWithOtherStuff = righto.all([stuff, otherStuff]);

stuffInParallelWithOtherStuff(function(err, result){
    result -> [3, 7]
});

Mate

Occasionally you might want to mate a number of tasks into one task.

For this, you can use righto.mate.

function getStuff(callback){

    // eventually...
    callback(null, 3);
}

var stuff = righto(getStuff);

function getOtherStuff(callback){

    // eventually...
    callback(null, 7);
}

var otherStuff = righto(getOtherStuff);

var stuffAndOtherStuff = righto.mate(stuff, otherStuff);

stuffAndOtherStuff(function(error, stuff, otherStuff){
    error -> null
    stuff -> 3
    otherStuff -> 7
});

Proxy support

If you are using righto in an environment that supports proxies, you can use the proxy API:

var righto = require('righto').proxy;

var foo = righto(function(done){
    setTimeout(function(){
        done(null, {foo: 'bar'});
    });
});

foo.bar(function(error, bar){
    bar === 'bar'
});

The proxied api always returns the proxied version, meaning you can dot-access arbitrarily:

var righto = require('righto').proxy;

var foo = righto(function(done){
    setTimeout(function(){
        done(null, {
            foo: {
                bar: {
                    baz: 'hello'
                }
            }
        });
    });
});

foo.bar.baz(function(error, baz){
    baz === 'hello'
});

FAQs

Package last updated on 07 Jul 2016

Did you know?

Socket

Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.

Install

Related posts

SocketSocket SOC 2 Logo

Product

  • Package Alerts
  • Integrations
  • Docs
  • Pricing
  • FAQ
  • Roadmap
  • Changelog

Packages

npm

Stay in touch

Get open source security insights delivered straight into your inbox.


  • Terms
  • Privacy
  • Security

Made with ⚡️ by Socket Inc