Most promise methods have "static" counterparts on the main Q
object, which will accept either a promise or a non-promise, and in the latter case create a fulfilled promise first. For example, Q.when(5, onFulfilled)
is equivalent to Q(5).then(onFulfilled)
. All others have static counterparts that are named the same as the promise method.
Some methods are named the same as JavaScript reserved words, like try
, catch
, and finally
. This helps show the very clear parallel between standard synchronous language constructs and asynchronous promise operations. However, such use of words as property names is only supported as of the ECMAScript 5 edition of the JavaScript language, which isn't implemented in certain older browsers like IE8, Safari 5, Android 2.2, or PhantomJS 1.8. If you're targeting those browsers, and aren't using a language like CoffeeScript that takes care of this for you, use their aliases instead, or escape them like Q["try"](...)
or promise["catch"](...)
.
The then
method from the Promises/A+ specification, with an additional progress handler.
Alias: promise.fail
(for non-ES5 browsers)
A sugar method, equivalent to promise.then(undefined, onRejected)
.
Deprecated: promise.observeEstimate
or a similar interface is due to replace this method in version 2. Progress does not compose well. https://github.com/kriskowal/gtor#progress-and-estimated-time-to-completion
A sugar method, equivalent to promise.then(undefined, undefined, onProgress)
. The onProgress
handler receives values that were sent to this promise either from the notify
method of the corresponding deferred, or from the promise that this promise became by virtue of being returned from a handler.
Alias: promise.fin
(for non-ES5 browsers)
Like a finally
clause, allows you to observe either the fulfillment or rejection of a promise, but to do so without modifying the final value. This is useful for collecting resources regardless of whether a job succeeded, like closing a database connection, shutting a server down, or deleting an unneeded key from an object.
finally
returns a promise, which will become resolved with the same fulfillment value or rejection reason as promise
. However, if callback
returns a promise, the resolution of the returned promise will be delayed until the promise returned from callback
is finished. Furthermore, if the returned promise rejects, that rejection will be passed down the chain instead of the previous result.
Much like then
, but with different behavior around unhandled rejection. If there is an unhandled rejection, either because promise
is rejected and no onRejected
callback was provided, or because onFulfilled
or onRejected
threw an error or returned a rejected promise, the resulting rejection reason is thrown as an exception in a future turn of the event loop.
This method should be used to terminate chains of promises that will not be passed elsewhere. Since exceptions thrown in then
callbacks are consumed and transformed into rejections, exceptions at the end of the chain are easy to accidentally, silently ignore. By arranging for the exception to be thrown in a future turn of the event loop, so that it won't be caught, it causes an onerror
event on the browser window
, or an uncaughtException
event on Node.js's process
object.
Exceptions thrown by done
will have long stack traces, if Q.longStackSupport
is set to true
. If Q.onerror
is set, exceptions will be delivered there instead of thrown in a future turn.
The Golden Rule of done
vs. then
usage is: either return
your promise to someone else, or if the chain ends with you, call done
to terminate it. Terminating with catch
is not sufficient because the catch handler may itself throw an error.
Returns a promise to get the named property of an object. Essentially equivalent to
promise.then(function (o) { return o[propertyName]; });
Experimental Alias: promise.mapply
Returns a promise for the result of calling the named method of an object with the given array of arguments. The object itself is this
in the function, just like a synchronous method call. Essentially equivalent to
promise.then(function (o) { return o[methodName].apply(o, args); });
Alias: promise.send
Experimental Alias: promise.mcall
Returns a promise for the result of calling the named method of an object with the given variadic arguments. The object itself is this
in the function, just like a synchronous method call.
Returns a promise for an array of the property names of an object. Essentially equivalent to
promise.then(function (o) { return Object.keys(o); });
Returns a new function that calls a function asynchronously with the given variadic arguments, and returns a promise. Notably, any synchronous return values or thrown exceptions are transformed, respectively, into fulfillment values or rejection reasons for the promise returned by this new function.
This method is especially useful in its static form for wrapping functions to ensure that they are always asynchronous, and that any thrown exceptions (intentional or accidental) are appropriately transformed into a returned rejected promise. For example:
var getUserData = Q.fbind(function (userName) { if (!userName) { throw new Error("userName must be truthy!"); } if (localCache.has(userName)) { return localCache.get(userName); } return getUserFromCloud(userName); });
Returns a promise for the result of calling a function, with the given array of arguments. Essentially equivalent to
promise.then(function (f) { return f.apply(undefined, args); });
Note that this will result in the same return value/thrown exception translation as explained above for fbind
.
Static Alias: Q.try
(ES5 browsers only)
Returns a promise for the result of calling a function, with the given variadic arguments. Has the same return value/thrown exception translation as explained above for fbind
.
In its static form, it is aliased as Q.try
, since it has semantics similar to a try
block (but handling both synchronous exceptions and asynchronous rejections). This allows code like
Q .try(function () { if (!isConnectedToCloud()) { throw new Error("The cloud is down!"); } return syncToCloud(); }) .catch(function (error) { console.error("Couldn't sync to the cloud", error); });
Returns a promise that is fulfilled with an array containing the fulfillment value of each promise, or is rejected with the same rejection reason as the first promise to be rejected.
This method is often used in its static form on arrays of promises, in order to execute a number of operations concurrently and be notified when they all succeed. For example:
Q.all([getFromDisk(), getFromCloud()]).done(function (values) { assert(values[0] === values[1]); // values[0] is fromDisk and values[1] is fromCloud });
Returns a promise that is fulfilled with an array of promise state snapshots, but only after all the original promises have settled, i.e. become either fulfilled or rejected.
This method is often used in its static form on arrays of promises, in order to execute a number of operations concurrently and be notified when they all finish, regardless of success or failure. For example:
Q.allSettled([saveToDisk(), saveToCloud()]).spread(function (disk, cloud) { console.log("saved to disk:", disk.state === "fulfilled"); console.log("saved to cloud:", cloud.state === "fulfilled"); }).done();
The state snapshots will be in the same form as those retrieved via promise.inspect
, i.e. either { state: "fulfilled", value: v }
or { state: "rejected", reason: r }
.
Like then
, but "spreads" the array into a variadic fulfillment handler. If any of the promises in the array are rejected, instead calls onRejected
with the first rejected promise's rejection reason.
This is especially useful in conjunction with all
, for example:
Q.all([getFromDisk(), getFromCloud()]).spread(function (diskVal, cloudVal) { assert(diskVal === cloudVal); }).done();
No Static Counterpart
A sugar method, equivalent to promise.then(function () { return value; })
.
No Static Counterpart
A sugar method, equivalent to promise.then(function () { throw reason; })
.
Introduced in version 1.1.0 (November 2014)
Attaches a handler that will observe the value of the promise when it becomes fulfilled, returning a promise for that same value, perhaps deferred but not replaced by the promise returned by the onFulfilled
handler.
Q("Hello, World!") .delay(1000) .tap(console.log) .then(function (message) { expect(message).toBe("Hello, World!"); })
Returns a promise that will have the same result as promise
, except that if promise
is not fulfilled or rejected before ms
milliseconds, the returned promise will be rejected with an Error
with the given message
. If message
is not supplied, the message will be "Timed out after " + ms + " ms"
.
promise.timeout(10000).then( function (result) { // will be called if the promise resolves normally console.log(result); }, function (err) { // will be called if the promise is rejected, or the 10 second timeout occurs console.log(err); } );
Returns a promise that will have the same result as promise
, but will only be fulfilled after at least ms
milliseconds have passed. If promise
is rejected, the resulting promise will be rejected immediately.
If the static version of Q.delay
is passed only a single argument, it returns a promise that will be fulfilled with undefined
after at least ms
milliseconds have passed. (If it's called with two arguments, it uses the usual static-counterpart translation, i.e. Q.delay(value, ms)
is equivalent to Q(value).delay(ms)
.)
This is a convenient way to insert a delay into a promise chain, or even simply to get a nicer syntax for setTimeout
:
Q.delay(150).then(doSomething);
Returns whether a given promise is in the fulfilled state. When the static version is used on non-promises, the result is always true
.
Returns whether a given promise is in the rejected state. When the static version is used on non-promises, the result is always false
.
Returns whether a given promise is in the pending state. When the static version is used on non-promises, the result is always false
.
Returns a "state snapshot" object, which will be in one of three forms:
{ state: "pending" }
{ state: "fulfilled", value: <fulfllment value> }
{ state: "rejected", reason: <rejection reason> }
Returns a "deferred" object with a:
promise
propertyresolve(value)
methodreject(reason)
methodnotify(value)
methodmakeNodeResolver()
methodThe resolve
and reject
methods control the state of the promise
property, which you can hand out to others while keeping the authority to modify its state to yourself. The notify
method is for progress notification, and the makeNodeResolver
method is for interfacing with Node.js (see below).
In all cases where a promise is resolved (i.e. either fulfilled or rejected), the resolution is permanent and cannot be reset. Attempting to call resolve
, reject
, or notify
if promise
is already resolved will be a no-op.
Deferreds are cool because they separate the promise part from the resolver part. So:
You can give the promise to any number of consumers and all of them will observe the resolution independently. Because the capability of observing a promise is separated from the capability of resolving the promise, none of the recipients of the promise have the ability to "trick" other recipients with misinformation (or indeed interfere with them in any way).
You can give the resolver to any number of producers and whoever resolves the promise first wins. Furthermore, none of the producers can observe that they lost unless you give them the promise part too.
Calling resolve
with a pending promise causes promise
to wait on the passed promise, becoming fulfilled with its fulfillment value or rejected with its rejection reason (or staying pending forever, if the passed promise does).
Calling resolve
with a rejected promise causes promise
to be rejected with the passed promise's rejection reason.
Calling resolve
with a fulfilled promise causes promise
to be fulfilled with the passed promise's fulfillment value.
Calling resolve
with a non-promise value causes promise
to be fulfilled with that value.
Calling reject
with a reason causes promise
to be rejected with that reason.
Calling notify
with a value causes promise
to be notified of progress with that value. That is, any onProgress
handlers registered with promise
or promises derived from promise
will be called with the progress value.
If value
is a Q promise, returns the promise.
If value
is a promise from another library it is coerced into a Q promise (where possible).
If value
is not a promise, returns a promise that is fulfilled with value
.
Returns a promise that is rejected with reason
.
Synchronously calls resolver(resolve, reject, notify)
and returns a promise whose state is controlled by the functions passed to resolver
. This is an alternative promise-creation API that has the same power as the deferred concept, but without introducing another conceptual entity.
If resolver
throws an exception, the returned promise will be rejected with that thrown exception as the rejection reason.
note: In the latest github, this method is called Q.Promise, but if you are using the npm package version 0.9.7 or below, the method is called Q.promise (lowercase vs uppercase p).
Q provides a number of functions for interfacing with Node.js style (err, result)
callback APIs.
Several of these are usually used in their static form, and thus listed here as such. Nevertheless, they also exist on each Q promise, in case you somehow have a promise for a Node.js-style function or for an object with Node.js-style methods.
Note that if a Node.js-style API calls back with more than one non-error parameter (e.g. child_process.execFile
), Q packages these into an array as the promise's fulfillment value when doing the translation.
Alias: Q.denodeify
Creates a promise-returning function from a Node.js-style function, optionally binding it with the given variadic arguments. An example:
var readFile = Q.nfbind(FS.readFile); readFile("foo.txt", "utf-8").done(function (text) { });
Note that if you have a method that uses the Node.js callback pattern, as opposed to just a function, you will need to bind its this
value before passing it to nfbind
, like so:
var Kitty = mongoose.model("Kitty"); var findKitties = Q.nfbind(Kitty.find.bind(Kitty));
The better strategy for methods would be to use Q.nbind
, as shown below.
Creates a promise-returning function from a Node.js-style method, optionally binding it with the given variadic arguments. An example:
var Kitty = mongoose.model("Kitty"); var findKitties = Q.nbind(Kitty.find, Kitty); findKitties({ cute: true }).done(function (theKitties) { });
Calls a Node.js-style function with the given array of arguments, returning a promise that is fulfilled if the Node.js function calls back with a result, or rejected if it calls back with an error (or throws one synchronously). An example:
Q.nfapply(FS.readFile, ["foo.txt", "utf-8"]).done(function (text) { });
Note that this example only works because FS.readFile
is a function exported from a module, not a method on an object. For methods, e.g. redisClient.get
, you must bind the method to an instance before passing it to Q.nfapply
(or, generally, as an argument to any function call):
Q.nfapply(redisClient.get.bind(redisClient), ["user:1:id"]).done(function (user) { });
The better strategy for methods would be to use Q.npost
, as shown below.
Calls a Node.js-style function with the given variadic arguments, returning a promise that is fulfilled if the Node.js function calls back with a result, or rejected if it calls back with an error (or throws one synchronously). An example:
Q.nfcall(FS.readFile, "foo.txt", "utf-8").done(function (text) { });
The same warning about functions vs. methods applies for nfcall
as it does for nfapply
. In this case, the better strategy would be to use Q.ninvoke
.
Deprecated Alias: Q.nmapply
Calls a Node.js-style method with the given arguments array, returning a promise that is fulfilled if the method calls back with a result, or rejected if it calls back with an error (or throws one synchronously). An example:
Q.npost(redisClient, "get", ["user:1:id"]).done(function (user) { });
Alias: Q.nsend
Deprecated Alias: Q.nmcall
Calls a Node.js-style method with the given variadic arguments, returning a promise that is fulfilled if the method calls back with a result, or rejected if it calls back with an error (or throws one synchronously). An example:
Q.ninvoke(redisClient, "get", "user:1:id").done(function (user) { });
If callback
is a function, assumes it's a Node.js-style callback, and calls it as either callback(rejectionReason)
when/if promise
becomes rejected, or as callback(null, fulfillmentValue)
when/if promise
becomes fulfilled. If callback
is not a function, simply returns promise
.
This method is useful for creating dual promise/callback APIs, i.e. APIs that return promises but also accept Node.js-style callbacks. For example:
function createUser(userName, userData, callback) { return database.ensureUserNameNotTaken(userName) .then(function () { return database.saveUserData(userName, userData); }) .nodeify(callback); }
Returns a function suitable for passing to a Node.js API. That is, it has a signature (err, result)
and will reject deferred.promise
with err
if err
is given, or fulfill it with result
if that is given.
This functionality is experimental.
This is an experimental tool for converting a generator function into a deferred function. This has the potential of reducing nested callbacks in engines that support yield
. See the generators example for further information.
This immediately runs a generator function, and forwards any uncaught errors to Q.onerror
. An uncaught error is deemed to occur if the function returns a rejected promise. Note that this automatically occurs if the generator function throws an error, e.g. by yield
ing on a promise that becomes rejected without surrounding that code with a try
/catch
:
Q.spawn(function* () { // If `createUser` returns a rejected promise, the rejection reason will // reach `Q.onerror`. var user = yield createUser(); showUserInUI(user); });
A settable property that will intercept any uncaught errors that would otherwise be thrown in the next tick of the event loop, usually as a result of done
. Can be useful for getting the full stack trace of an error in browsers, which is not usually possible with window.onerror
.
Gets an array of reasons belonging to rejected promises that currently have not been handled, i.e. no onRejected
callbacks have been called for them, they haven't been chained off of, etc. Generally these represent potentially-"lost" errors, so this array should be empty except possibly at times when you are passing a rejected promise around asynchronously so that someone can handle the rejection later.
Turns off unhandled rejection tracking, which provides a slight efficiency boost if you don't find that debug information helpful. It also prevents Q from printing any unhandled rejection reasons upon process exit in Node.js.
Resets Q's internal tracking of unhandled rejections, but keeps unhandled rejection tracking on. This method is exposed mainly for testing and diagnostic purposes, where you may have accumulated some unhandled rejections but want to re-start with a clean slate.
Returns whether the given value is a Q promise.
Returns whether the given value is a promise (i.e. it's an object with a then
function).
Creates a new version of func
that accepts any combination of promise and non-promise values, converting them to their fulfillment values before calling the original func
. The returned version also always returns a promise: if func
does a return
or throw
, then Q.promised(func)
will return fulfilled or rejected promise, respectively.
This can be useful for creating functions that accept either promises or non-promise values, and for ensuring that the function always returns a promise even in the face of unintentional thrown exceptions.
A settable property that lets you turn on long stack trace support. If turned on, "stack jumps" will be tracked across asynchronous promise operations, so that if an uncaught error is thrown by done
or a rejection reason's stack
property is inspected in a rejection callback, a long stack trace is produced.
The Q
promise constructor establishes the basic API for performing operations on objects: "get", "put", "del", "post", "apply", and "keys". This set of "operators" can be extended by creating promises that respond to messages with other operator names, and by sending corresponding messages to those promises.
Sends an arbitrary message to a promise, with the given array of arguments.
Care should be taken not to introduce control-flow hazards and security holes when forwarding messages to promises. The functions above, particularly then
, are carefully crafted to prevent a poorly crafted or malicious promise from breaking the invariants like not applying callbacks multiple times or in the same turn of the event loop.
© 2009–2017 Kristopher Michael Kowal
Licensed under the MIT License.
https://github.com/kriskowal/q/wiki/API-Reference