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Class RSVP.Promise
| Defined in: | node_modules/rsvp/lib/rsvp/promise.js:26 |
|---|---|
| Module: | @ember/application |
Promise objects represent the eventual result of an asynchronous operation. The primary way of interacting with a promise is through its then method, which registers callbacks to receive either a promise’s eventual value or the reason why the promise cannot be fulfilled.
Terminology
promiseis an object or function with athenmethod whose behavior conforms to this specification.thenableis an object or function that defines athenmethod.valueis any legal JavaScript value (including undefined, a thenable, or a promise).exceptionis a value that is thrown using the throw statement.reasonis a value that indicates why a promise was rejected.settledthe final resting state of a promise, fulfilled or rejected.
A promise can be in one of three states: pending, fulfilled, or rejected.
Promises that are fulfilled have a fulfillment value and are in the fulfilled state. Promises that are rejected have a rejection reason and are in the rejected state. A fulfillment value is never a thenable.
Promises can also be said to resolve a value. If this value is also a promise, then the original promise's settled state will match the value's settled state. So a promise that resolves a promise that rejects will itself reject, and a promise that resolves a promise that fulfills will itself fulfill.
Basic Usage:
let promise = new Promise(function(resolve, reject) {
// on success
resolve(value);
// on failure
reject(reason);
});
promise.then(function(value) {
// on fulfillment
}, function(reason) {
// on rejection
});
Advanced Usage:
Promises shine when abstracting away asynchronous interactions such as XMLHttpRequests.
function getJSON(url) {
return new Promise(function(resolve, reject){
let xhr = new XMLHttpRequest();
xhr.open('GET', url);
xhr.onreadystatechange = handler;
xhr.responseType = 'json';
xhr.setRequestHeader('Accept', 'application/json');
xhr.send();
function handler() {
if (this.readyState === this.DONE) {
if (this.status === 200) {
resolve(this.response);
} else {
reject(new Error('getJSON: `' + url + '` failed with status: [' + this.status + ']'));
}
}
};
});
}
getJSON('/posts.json').then(function(json) {
// on fulfillment
}, function(reason) {
// on rejection
});
Unlike callbacks, promises are great composable primitives.
Promise.all([
getJSON('/posts'),
getJSON('/comments')
]).then(function(values){
values[0] // => postsJSON
values[1] // => commentsJSON
return values;
});
Methods
Properties
No documented items
Events
No documented items
© 2020 Yehuda Katz, Tom Dale and Ember.js contributors
Licensed under the MIT License.
https://api.emberjs.com/ember/2.18/classes/RSVP.Promise