@l0oky Well, you can make an educated guess and then verify asynchronously if you've got it right, hopefully improving your predictions for the next time
I think I'm looking at Promises in a very limited way. In the MDN example, the Promise calls another function (.then) when the first one completes. Why not put it all together in the async function?
but I am getting this as a return statement { _bitField: 0, _fulfillmentHandler0: undefined, _rejectionHandler0: undefined, _progressHandler0: undefined, _promise0: undefined, _receiver0: undefined, _settledValue: undefined, _boundTo: undefined, '$sql': [] }
What's special about a promise, is that you can call .then() on it, which, if you think about it in the original sense of callbacks, is like registering a callback to be called when the function ends (but not quite)
The resolve function is more of a marker, to tell the promise resolver that "This promise is now resolved! Please call all of the handlers passed with .then() now!"
Same with reject for rejection (and the .catch() method, or the less known second parameter to .then())
var one = delayPromise(1000);
var two = one.then(function() { return delayPromise(1000); };
var stillTwo = one.then(function() { return delayPromise(1000); };
@l0oky .then() and .catch() aren't specific to sequelize, they are normal ways of using Promises. That's what the other conversation in here is also about.
In real code, you almost never need to use the new Promise constructor.
bluebird, for once, has Promise.promisify which takes a function that takes a callback, and returns a new function that does the same and returns a promise.
Recursion? Calling yourself at the end is called tail recursion. When that gets too deep, stack explodes. TCO (=tail call optimisation) makes sure it doesn't go boom.
In conclusion is recursion that doesn't overflow :p
It's much better really.
function factorial(n, acc = 1) {
if (n <= 1) return acc;
return factorial(n - 1, n * acc);
}
// Stack overflow in most implementations today,
// but safe on arbitrary inputs in ES6
console.log( factorial(1000000000) )
when you call a function and return the value directly (i.e. return fun();) normally the computer goes "call this function, get it to return a value to me, and I'll return it to my caller." TCO changes that to "call this function, and get it to return a value to my caller directly."
Canonical idea: Write a canonical question and answer about promisifying XHR for a 500 bounty from me. Ping me for details. (Preference to folks under 10k)
// lib/math.js
export function sum(x, y) {
return x + y;
}
export var pi = 3.141593;
// app.js
import * as math from "lib/math";
alert("2π = " + math.sum(math.pi, math.pi));
What is the correct antonym for 'resolved' (in the context of promises)? What do you call a promise that is not yet a promise? If that makes any kind of sense..