Hi, I have a datatable, and I can't seem to change the text colour inside the select dropdown for the amount of entries in the table, it is currently showing as the same colour as the background unless on hover prnt.sc/AlFDz5V6n1EG
if the following function returns a Promise<string> because it is an async function
async function foo() {
const x: string = "";
return x; // return string
} // return Promise<string>
why would the following function not return Promise<Promise<string>>?
async function bar() {
const x: Promise<string> = foo();
return x; // return Promise<string>
} // expected return Promise<Promise<string>>, but actually Promise<string>
@Wietlol Promises autoflatten. There is never a "promise inside a promise". Promise.resolve(Promise.resolve(x))) is essentially the same as Promise.resolve(x).
It's not monadic, though.
It's similar to what you'd get from a chain/flatMap/bind (for the last one in FP/Haskell sense not JS sense) but not quite.
I've been learning about functional programming and have come across Monads, Functors and Applicatives.
From my understanding the following definitions apply:
a) ( A=>B ) => C[A] => C[B] | Functor
b) ( A=>C[B] ) => C[A] => C[B] | Monad
c) ( C[A=>B] ) => C[A] => C[B] | Applicative
(refe...
(Also, just if it's not clear - the thin with resolve also applies to fn1(data1).then(data => fn2(data2)))
@Wietlol Essentially. You only have one promise at a time. If you resolve a promise p1 with a promise p2 then p1 simply adopts the state of p2 whenever it gets resolved.
also, would there be a difference between the following two functions then?
async function bar() {
const x: Promise<string> = foo();
return x;
}
function bar() {
const x: Promise<string> = foo();
return x;
}
There is some discussion overall whether you should or shouldn't use async when not using await. It's similar to C# where async only really is there to allow await. If you don't use await in the body, then the async is mostly useless. Some might point out that marking the function with async is still useful to show it returns a promise. Which I'd tend to agree with. But if you're using TS anyway, it should be clear already, so the argument loses steam there.
In pure JS-land, I'd tentatively agree that async function fn() is OK even if it doesn't use await. But also, not really worth pushing for this. Not a hill worth dying on. In TS-land, I'd be against it.
There is a very small note I need to add here as it's a bit of a corner case - some times resolving a promise with a promise might produce slightly different sequence of resolutions. It takes more than one tick to resolve those. In some case. I only need to mention this because it doesn't matter. Yet I've seen people latch onto it for reasons that are beyond me.
It only shows up if you compare two different promise chains and you shouldn't really do that. You shouldn't expect two promise chains to resolve in any specific order. If order is important, these chains need to be combined.
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@JaakkoSeppälä I mean - yes. But it's not two lines of code or anywhere near. You'd need code that requests access to the webcam, then uses it, sends the stream somewhere. Likely not even directly to another computer but to some server where the other computer connects to and gets the data.
Or you could do it directly peer to peer, I suppose. Depends on your requirements.
In either case, it's not a simple thing but an entire project by itself.
typeof just returns a string that indicates the type.. But that type doesn't exists .. that is what I think .. Is that right? Like Object.prototype.toString.call(new String("abc")) would return [object String] where String corresponds to the constructor mostly. That means it indicates an actual type. And as i assume object (inside [object String]) just says its an object .. nothing else
What do you mean by "that type doesn't exists"? Basically they all do. Maybe arguable for "function" as functions are still objects but it still exists. It's a callable object.
Also, there is never really a need to use the object wrapper for primitives. new String() and new Number() and new Boolean() serve no useful purpose for regular code.
"where String corresponds to the constructor mostly." I mean sort of. It's historic where the types would be identified with the names the same as the constructors. In modern ES6 JS the text "String" corresponds to @@toStringTag and string objects have it set to the value "String". You can override it on your own objects or other objects.
||> const strObj = new String("hello"); strObj[Symbol.toStringTag] = "Tomato"; console.log(Object.prototype.toString.call(strObj));
Yeah i know new String () etc.. not a good practice. By "that type doesn't exists" i mean if I call any method on the string "abc".toUpperCase() it coerces it to String Object in order to call the method .. So i though typeof just indicates that its a string type. But that type doesnt correcpond to any Class or constructor
Same with "undefined" which is also the official type (which has a single value as member).
@Sadiq you mean the typeof x result? It's a primitive string which describes the type. There isn't an actual object representing the type at runtime that you can get access to, though.
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@Sadiq Erm, no. Well, it's an implementation detail. Doesn't really make sense to describe them as such. Primitive values are, well, values. If you do a = "hello"; and b = a the implementation might optimise by sharing the same memory. It wouldn't really matter for the expected behaviour.
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