Learn everything you need to know about promises and asynchronous JavaScript with this handy cheatsheet.
2021-06-12T19:30:41+03:00
Promise basics
Promises start in a pending state, neither fulfilled or rejected.
When the operation is completed, a promise will become fulfilled with a value.
If the operation fails, a promise will get rejected with an error.
Creating promises
The function passed to the Promise constructor will execute synchronously.
Use resolve() or reject() to create promises from values.
Promise.resolve(val) will fulfill the promise with val.
Promise.reject(err) will reject the promise with err.
If you put a fulfilled promise into a fulfilled promise, they will collapse into one.
// Resolving with a value, rejecting with an error
newPromise((resolve,reject)=>{performOperation((err,val)=>{if(err)reject(err);elseresolve(val);});});// Resolving without value, no need for reject
constdelay=(ms)=>newPromise(resolve=>setTimeout(resolve,ms));
Handling promises
Promise.prototype.then() accepts two optional arguments (onFulfilled, onRejected).
Promise.prototype.then() will call onFulfilled once the promise is fulfilled.
Promise.prototype.then() will call onRejected if the promise is rejected.
Promise.prototype.then() passes errors through if onRejected in undefined.
Promise.prototype.catch() accepts one argument (onRejected).
Promise.prototype.catch() behaves like Promise.prototype.then() when onFulfilled is omitted.
Promise.prototype.finally() accepts one argument (onFinally).
Promise.prototype.finally() calls onFinally with no arguments once any outcome is available.
Promise.prototype.finally() passes through input promise.
promisedOperation().then(val=>value+1,// Called once the promise is fulfilled
err=>{// Called if the promise is rejected
if(err===someKnownErr)returndefaultVal;elsethrowerr;}).catch(err=>console.log(err);// Called if the promise is rejected
).finally(()=>console.log('Done');// Called once any outcome is available
);
All three of the above methods will not be executed at least until the next tick, even for promises that already have an outcome.
Combining promises
Promise.all() turns an array of promises into a promise of an array.
If any promise is rejected, the error will pass through.
Promise.race() passes through the first settled promise.
Promise.all([p1,p2,p3]).then(([v1,v2,v3])=>{// Values always correspond to the order of promises,
// not the order they resolved in (i.e. v1 corresponds to p1)
});Promise.race([p1,p2,p3]).then(val=>{// val will take the value of the first resolved promise
});
async/await
Calling an async function always results in a promise.
(async () => value)() will resolve to value.
(async () => throw err)() will reject with an error.
await waits for a promise to be fulfilled and returns its value.
await can only be used in async functions.
await also accepts non-promise values.
await always waits at least until the next tick before resolving, even when waiting already fulfilled promises or non-promise values.
async()=>{try{letval=awaitpromisedValue();// Do stuff here
}catch(err){// Handle error
}}