Regarding the other method: You say that is a PUT method has only one path parameter then you can call <ResourceClass>.updatePassword({adminId: ...}) and it is passed to the URL path parameter ?
@StephaneEybert: If you want to to always pass the parameters explicitly, then there is no need for default parameters (neither in the resource, nor in the actions).
@StephaneEybert: Ehm...have you seen the demo I provided ? It features a call to a POST method with two path parameters without using default parameters :) In the meantime, we are waiting for your code...
@StephaneEybert: Like I said. Your question is based on "your understanding" (as you say), but your assumptions are wrong, thus the first question is void. I think I answered the second question. Since you obviously have run into a situation that caused you to make some wrong assumptions, if you post some code (e.g. a reproduction or an example of what seems to back your assumptions) I will gladly look into it and enlighten you :) (Or maybe you have stumbled upon a bug that needs to be tracked down and squashed.)
@StephaneEybert: POST and PUT methods are handle identically, so there shouldn't be any difference. Can you provide a fiddle or at least an SSCCE so I can reproduce the problem you are facing ? (BTW, if this answer helped you don't forget to upvote and/or accept it.)
Fetching data from (or sending data to) the server is an async operation. You can't avoid that. What you can do is use promises (which is an alternative way to callbacks) to handle that "asynchronicity".