Caleb James DeLisle 2a6bde9552 Moved node_modules to the top level directory so that dependencies can be accessed by scripts nested in with the code | il y a 10 ans | |
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lib | il y a 10 ans | |
test | il y a 10 ans | |
.npmignore | il y a 10 ans | |
package.json | il y a 10 ans | |
readme.md | il y a 10 ans |
nThen is designed to be the most small, simple and intuitive asynchronous library.
x = synchronous_call();
y = use(x);
a = another_sync_call(x); # Hey!
b = yet_another_sync_call(x); # these two could run at the same time!
z = something_else_synchronous(b);
c = last_synchronous_call(z);
do_next_job(c);
Ok so we learned that doing it that way is slow and we have asynchronous so we never have to be slow anymore.
var context = {};
async_call(function(x) {
context.y = use(x);
another_call(x, function(a) {
context.a = a;
if (context.c) { do_next_job(context); }
});
yet_another_call(x, function(b) {
something_else(b, function(z) {
last_call(z, function(c) {
context.c = c;
if (context.a) { do_next_job(context); }
});
});
});
});
That doesn't look like very much fun :( And to make matters worse, what happens if one of those functions never returns?
var to = setTimeout(function() { abort_process(); }, 3000);
You can see where this is going.
var nThen = require('nthen');
var context = {};
nThen(function(waitFor) {
// Remember to wrap all of your async callbacks with waitFor()
// otherwise they won't block the next nThen block.
asyncCall(waitFor(function(x) {
context.x = x;
}));
}).nThen(function(waitFor) {
// These two functions run at the same time :D
anotherCall(x, waitFor(function(a) {
context.a = a;
}));
yetAnotherCall(x, waitFor(function(b) {
context.b = b;
}));
}).nThen(function(waitFor) {
somethingElse(b, waitFor(function(z) {
context.z = z;
}));
}).nThen(function(waitFor) {
lastCall(z, waitFor(function(c) {
context.c = c;
}));
}).nThen(function(waitFor) {
doNextJob(context);
}).orTimeout(function(waitFor) {
// Using the orTimeout() function, you can chain a failure timeout.
abortProcess();
}, 3000).nThen(function(waitFor) {
// Finally, you can chain more nThen calls after the timeout
// these will be excuted regardless of whether the chain times out or not.
// think of ajax.onComplete
someFinalCleanup();
});
This is perfectly ok, your second call to waitFor() will cause the second function to block the entry of the next nThen block and it will perform as expected.
nThen(function(waitFor) {
asyncCall(waitFor(function(x) {
iWouldReallyRatherChainThisCall(x, waitFor(function(y) {
context.y = y;
}));
}));
}).nThen(function(waitFor) {
The variable names used in this readme are only for example and to make you mad.
Public Domain
1.1 Ok maybe practically perfect was a stretch, fixed a bug which causes incorrect behavior if the the first nThen function returns synchronously.
nThen(function(waitFor) {
console.log("this function returns synchronously");
}).nThen(function(waitFor) {
console.log("This never gets executed because nThen 1.0 has a bug :(");
});