What is when?
The 'when' npm package is a robust library for working with asynchronous programming in JavaScript, particularly using promises. It provides utilities for creating, managing, and composing promises, making it easier to handle asynchronous operations and their potential complexities.
What are when's main functionalities?
Creating Promises
This feature allows the creation of new promises. The code sample demonstrates how to create a simple promise that resolves with 'Hello, World!' after 1 second.
const when = require('when');
const promise = when.promise(function(resolve, reject) {
setTimeout(() => resolve('Hello, World!'), 1000);
});
promise.then(response => console.log(response));
Chaining Promises
This feature demonstrates chaining multiple promises. It shows how to perform a series of tasks sequentially, where each task starts only after the previous one has completed.
const when = require('when');
const cleanRoom = () => when.promise(resolve => resolve('Room cleaned'));
const removeTrash = () => when.promise(resolve => resolve('Trash removed'));
const winIcecream = () => when.promise(resolve => resolve('Won ice cream'));
cleanRoom()
.then(result => {
console.log(result);
return removeTrash();
})
.then(result => {
console.log(result);
return winIcecream();
})
.then(result => console.log(result));
Handling Errors
This feature involves error handling in promises. The code sample shows how to catch and handle errors that occur during the execution of promises.
const when = require('when');
const failTask = () => when.promise((resolve, reject) => reject('Failed task'));
failTask()
.then(result => console.log('Success:', result))
.catch(error => console.log('Error:', error));
Other packages similar to when
bluebird
Bluebird is a full-featured promise library with a focus on innovative features and performance. It is similar to 'when' but often cited for its superior performance and additional features like cancellation, progress tracking, and more detailed stack traces.
q
Q is one of the earliest promise libraries that influenced many others. It offers a similar API to 'when' but is generally considered to be less performant in modern applications. It provides a straightforward approach to handling asynchronous operations with promises.
promise
The 'promise' package provides a minimalist implementation similar to the ES6 Promise specification. It is more lightweight compared to 'when' but lacks some of the more advanced features and utilities provided by 'when'.
when.js
When.js is cujojs's lightweight CommonJS Promises/A and when()
implementation, derived from the async core of wire.js, cujojs's IOC Container. It also provides several other useful Promise-related concepts, such as joining multiple promises, mapping and reducing collections of promises, timed promises, and has a robust unit test suite.
It passes the Promises/A Test Suite, is frighteningly fast, and is under 1.3k when compiled with Google Closure (w/advanced optimizations) and gzipped, and has no dependencies.
What's New?
1.6.0
- New when.join - Joins 2 or more promises together into a single promise.
- when.some and when.any now act like competitive races, and have generally more useful behavior. Read the discussion in #60.
- Experimental progress event propagation. Progress events will propagate through promise chains. Read the details here.
- Temporarily removed calls to
Object.freeze
. Promises are no longer frozen due to a horrendous v8 performance penalty. Read discussion here.
- IMPORTANT: Continue to treat promises as if they are frozen, since
freeze()
will be reintroduced once v8 performance improves.
- when/debug now allows setting global a debugging callback for rejected promises.
1.5.2
1.5.1
- Performance optimization for when.defer, up to 1.5x in some cases.
- when/debug can now log exceptions and rejections in deeper promise chains, in some cases, even when the promises involved aren't when.js promises.
1.5.0
- New task execution and concurrency management: when/sequence, when/pipeline, and when/parallel.
- Performance optimizations for when.all and when.map, up to 2x in some cases.
- Options for disabling paranoid mode that provides a significant performance gain in v8 (e.g. Node and Chrome). See this v8 performance problem with Object.freeze for more info.
- Important:
deferred
and deferred.resolver
no longer throw when resolved/rejected multiple times. They will return silently as if the they had succeeded. This prevents parties to whom only the resolver
has been given from using try/catch
to determine the state of the associated promise.
- For debugging, you can use the when/debug module, which will still throw when a deferred is resolved/rejected multiple times.
Full Changelog
Docs & Examples
API docs
More info on the wiki
Examples
Quick Start
AMD
-
git clone https://github.com/cujojs/when
or git submodule add https://github.com/cujojs/when
-
Configure your loader with a package:
packages: [
{ name: 'when', location: 'path/to/when/', main: 'when' },
]
-
define(['when', ...], function(when, ...) { ... });
or require(['when', ...], function(when, ...) { ... });
Script Tag
git clone https://github.com/cujojs/when
or git submodule add https://github.com/cujojs/when
<script src="path/to/when/when.js"></script>
when
will be available as window.when
Node
npm install when
var when = require('when');
RingoJS
ringo-admin install cujojs/when
var when = require('when');
Running the Unit Tests
Node
Note that when.js includes @domenic's Promises/A Test Suite. Running unit tests in Node will run both when.js's own test suite, and the Promises/A Test Suite.
npm install
npm test
Browsers
npm install
npm start
- starts buster server & prints a url- Point browsers at /capture, e.g.
localhost:1111/capture
npm run-script test-browser
References
Much of this code was inspired by @unscriptable's tiny promises, the async innards of wire.js, and some gists here, here, here, and here
Some of the code has been influenced by the great work in Q, Dojo's Deferred, and uber.js.