JavaScript, through its popularity and recent improvements, is increasingly becoming the web programmer's best friend. And like all best friends, JavaScript keeps its promises.
Now that may sound a little strange, but it's true. Most current browsers support what is called the Promise object. A promise is quite like a function in that it represents a piece of code or a task that you would like to be executed at some point in the future.
Here's what a promise looks like.
var myPromise = new Promise(function (resolve, reject) { // Task to carry out goes here. });
You can see here that when we create a promise we give it a single argument, which is a function containing code that we would like to execute at some point in the future. You may have also have noticed the two arguments in the function passed to the promise, resolve
and reject
. These are also functions and are our way of telling the Promise whether it has done what it promised to do. This is how you would use them:
var myPromise = new Promise(function (resolve, reject) { if (true) { resolve('Hello Tuts+ fans!'); } else { reject('Aww, didn\'t work.'); } });
This promise is obviously always going to resolve as the if
statement will always be true. This is just for learning purposes—we'll do something more realistic later on—but imagine replacing the true
with a snippet of code that you weren't 100% sure was going to work.
Now that we've created a promise, how do we use it? Well, we need to tell it what those resolve
and reject
functions are. We do this by using the promise's then
method.
myPromise.then(function (result) { // Resolve callback. console.log(result); }, function (result) { // Reject callback. console.error(result); });
Because our if statement is always passing its true
check, the above code will always log "Hello Tuts+ fans!" to the console. It will also do it immediately. This is because the code inside our Promise's constructor is synchronous, meaning that it isn't waiting on any operation to execute. It has all the information it needs to continue and does so as soon as possible.
Where promises really shine, though, is when it comes to asynchronous tasks—tasks where you don't know when exactly the promise will be fulfilled. A real-world example of an asynchronous task is fetching a resource, like a JSON file for instance, via AJAX. We don't know how long the server is going to take to respond, and it may even fail. Let's add in some AJAX to our promise code.
var myPromise = new Promise(function (resolve, reject) { // Standard AJAX request setup and load. var request = new XMLHttpRequest(); // Request a user's comment from our fake blog. request.open('GET', 'http://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/posts/1'); // Set function to call when resource is loaded. request.onload = function () { if (request.status === 200) { resolve(request.response); } else { reject('Page loaded, but status not OK.'); } }; // Set function to call when loading fails. request.onerror = function () { reject('Aww, didn\'t work at all.'); } request.send(); });
The code here is just standard JavaScript for performing an AJAX request. We request a resource, in this case a JSON file at a specified URL, and wait for it to respond. We'll never know exactly when. And we obviously don't want to halt the execution of out script to wait for it, so what do we do?
Well, luckily we've put this code inside a promise. By putting it here, we're basically saying, "Hey piece of code, I've got to go just now but I'll give you a call later and tell you when to execute. Promise you'll do it and tell me when you're done?" And the code will say, "Yes, of course. I promise."
An important thing to note in the above piece of code is the calling of the resolve
and reject
functions. Remember, these are our way of telling our promise that our code has or hasn't executed successfully. Otherwise, we'll never know.
Using the same code from our basic example, we can see how our AJAX request inside the promise will now work.
// Tell our promise to execute its code // and tell us when it's done. myPromise.then(function (result) { // Prints received JSON to the console. console.log(result); }, function (result) { // Prints "Aww didn't work" or // "Page loaded, but status not OK." console.error(result); });
I knew we could trust you, myPromise
.
Now, you may be thinking at this point that promises are just fancy callback functions with a nicer syntax. That's true to a degree, but to continue with our AJAX example, say you needed to make few more requests, each request based on the result of the last. Or what if you needed to process the JSON first?
Doing this with callbacks would end in heavy nesting of functions, each one becoming increasingly difficult to keep track of. Luckily, in the world of promises we can chain such functions together like so. Here's an example where once we receive the JSON for a user's comment on our fake blog, then we want to make sure it's all lowercase before doing something else with it.
myPromise .then(function (result) { // Once we receive JSON, // turn it into a JSON object and return. return JSON.parse(result); }) .then(function (parsedJSON) { // Once json has been parsed, // get the email address and make it lowercase. return parsedJSON.email.toLowerCase(); }) .then(function (emailAddress) { // Once text has been made lowercase, // print it to the console. console.log(emailAddress); }, function (err) { // Something in the above chain went wrong? // Print reject output. console.error(err); });
You can see here that while our initial call was asynchronous, it's possible to chain synchronous calls too. The code in each resolve
function inside the then
will be called when each one returns. You'll also notice that there is only one error function specified here for the whole chain. By placing this at the end of the chain as the reject
function in the last then
, any promise in the chain that calls reject
will call this one.
Now that we're a bit more confident with promises, let's create another one in conjunction with the one above. We'll create one that takes our new lowercase email address and will (pretend to) send an email to that address. This is just an example to illustrate something asynchronous—it could be anything, like contacting a server to see if the email was on a whitelist or if the user is logged in. We'll need to give the email address to the new promise, but promises don't accept arguments. The way to get around this is to wrap the promise in a function that does, like so:
var sendEmail = function (emailAddress) { return new Promise(function (resolve, reject) { // Pretend to send an email // or do something else asynchronous setTimeout(function () { resolve('Email sent to ' + emailAddress); }, 3000); }); };
We're using the setTimeout
call here to simply fake a task that takes a few seconds to run asynchronously.
So how do we use our new promise-creating function? Well, since each resolve
function used within a then
should return a function, then we can use it in a similar way to our synchronous tasks.
myPromise .then(function (result) { return JSON.parse(result); }) .then(function (parsedJSON) { return parsedJSON.email.toLowerCase(); }) .then(function (emailAddress) { return sendEmail(emailAddress) }) .then(function (result) { // Outputs "Email sent to stuart@fakemail.biz" console.log(result); }, function (err) { console.error(err); });
Let's go over this flow just to summarise what's going on. Our original promise myPromise
requests a piece of JSON. When that JSON is received (we don't know when), we turn the JSON into a JavaScript object and return that value.
Once that's done, we take the email address out of the JSON and make it lowercase. Then we send an email to that address, and again we don't know when it's going to complete, but when it does we'll output a success message to the console. No heavy nesting in sight.
I hope this has been a useful introduction to Promises, and has given you good reason to start using them in your JavaScript projects. If you want to learn more about Promises in greater detail, check out Jake Archibald's excellent HTML5 Rocks article on this very subject.
Create Modern Vue Apps Using Create-Vue and Vite
/Pros and Cons of Using WordPress
/How to Fix the “There Has Been a Critical Error in Your Website” Error in WordPress
/How To Fix The “There Has Been A Critical Error in Your Website” Error in WordPress
/How to Create a Privacy Policy Page in WordPress
/How Long Does It Take to Learn JavaScript?
/The Best Way to Deep Copy an Object in JavaScript
/Adding and Removing Elements From Arrays in JavaScript
/Create a JavaScript AJAX Post Request: With and Without jQuery
/5 Real-Life Uses for the JavaScript reduce() Method
/How to Enable or Disable a Button With JavaScript: jQuery vs. Vanilla
/How to Enable or Disable a Button With JavaScript: jQuery vs Vanilla
/Confirm Yes or No With JavaScript
/How to Change the URL in JavaScript: Redirecting
/15+ Best WordPress Twitter Widgets
/27 Best Tab and Accordion Widget Plugins for WordPress (Free & Premium)
/21 Best Tab and Accordion Widget Plugins for WordPress (Free & Premium)
/30 HTML Best Practices for Beginners
/31 Best WordPress Calendar Plugins and Widgets (With 5 Free Plugins)
/25 Ridiculously Impressive HTML5 Canvas Experiments
/How to Implement Email Verification for New Members
/How to Create a Simple Web-Based Chat Application
/30 Popular WordPress User Interface Elements
/Top 18 Best Practices for Writing Super Readable Code
/Best Affiliate WooCommerce Plugins Compared
/18 Best WordPress Star Rating Plugins
/10+ Best WordPress Twitter Widgets
/20+ Best WordPress Booking and Reservation Plugins
/Working With Tables in React: Part Two
/Best CSS Animations and Effects on CodeCanyon
/30 CSS Best Practices for Beginners
/How to Create a Custom WordPress Plugin From Scratch
/10 Best Responsive HTML5 Sliders for Images and Text… and 3 Free Options
/16 Best Tab and Accordion Widget Plugins for WordPress
/18 Best WordPress Membership Plugins and 5 Free Plugins
/25 Best WooCommerce Plugins for Products, Pricing, Payments and More
/10 Best WordPress Twitter Widgets
1 /12 Best Contact Form PHP Scripts for 2020
/20 Popular WordPress User Interface Elements
/10 Best WordPress Star Rating Plugins
/12 Best CSS Animations on CodeCanyon
/12 Best WordPress Booking and Reservation Plugins
/12 Elegant CSS Pricing Tables for Your Latest Web Project
/24 Best WordPress Form Plugins for 2020
/14 Best PHP Event Calendar and Booking Scripts
/Getting Started With Django: Newly Updated Course
/Create a Blog for Each Category or Department in Your WooCommerce Store
/8 Best WordPress Booking and Reservation Plugins
/Best Exit Popups for WordPress Compared
/Best Exit Popups for WordPress Compared
/11 Best Tab & Accordion WordPress Widgets & Plugins
/12 Best Tab & Accordion WordPress Widgets & Plugins
1 /New Course: Practical React Fundamentals
/Short Course: Better Angular App Architecture With Modules
/Preview Our New Course on Angular Material
/Build Your Own CAPTCHA and Contact Form in PHP
/Object-Oriented PHP With Classes and Objects
/Best Practices for ARIA Implementation
/Accessible Apps: Barriers to Access and Getting Started With Accessibility
/Dramatically Speed Up Your React Front-End App Using Lazy Loading
/15 Best Modern JavaScript Admin Templates for React, Angular, and Vue.js
/15 Best Modern JavaScript Admin Templates for React, Angular and Vue.js
/19 Best JavaScript Admin Templates for React, Angular, and Vue.js
/New Course: Build an App With JavaScript and the MEAN Stack
/10 Best WordPress Facebook Widgets
13 /Hands-on With ARIA: Accessibility for eCommerce
/New eBooks Available for Subscribers
/Hands-on With ARIA: Homepage Elements and Standard Navigation
/Site Accessibility: Getting Started With ARIA
/How Secure Are Your JavaScript Open-Source Dependencies?
/New Course: Secure Your WordPress Site With SSL
/Testing Components in React Using Jest and Enzyme
/Testing Components in React Using Jest: The Basics
/15 Best PHP Event Calendar and Booking Scripts
/Create Interactive Gradient Animations Using Granim.js
/How to Build Complex, Large-Scale Vue.js Apps With Vuex
1 /Examples of Dependency Injection in PHP With Symfony Components
/Set Up Routing in PHP Applications Using the Symfony Routing Component
1 /A Beginner’s Guide to Regular Expressions in JavaScript
/Introduction to Popmotion: Custom Animation Scrubber
/Introduction to Popmotion: Pointers and Physics
/New Course: Connect to a Database With Laravel’s Eloquent ORM
/How to Create a Custom Settings Panel in WooCommerce
/Building the DOM faster: speculative parsing, async, defer and preload
1 /20 Useful PHP Scripts Available on CodeCanyon
3 /How to Find and Fix Poor Page Load Times With Raygun
/Introduction to the Stimulus Framework
/Single-Page React Applications With the React-Router and React-Transition-Group Modules
12 Best Contact Form PHP Scripts
1 /Getting Started With the Mojs Animation Library: The ShapeSwirl and Stagger Modules
/Getting Started With the Mojs Animation Library: The Shape Module
/Getting Started With the Mojs Animation Library: The HTML Module
/Project Management Considerations for Your WordPress Project
/8 Things That Make Jest the Best React Testing Framework
/Creating an Image Editor Using CamanJS: Layers, Blend Modes, and Events
/New Short Course: Code a Front-End App With GraphQL and React
/Creating an Image Editor Using CamanJS: Applying Basic Filters
/Creating an Image Editor Using CamanJS: Creating Custom Filters and Blend Modes
/Modern Web Scraping With BeautifulSoup and Selenium
/Challenge: Create a To-Do List in React
1 /Deploy PHP Web Applications Using Laravel Forge
/Getting Started With the Mojs Animation Library: The Burst Module
/10 Things Men Can Do to Support Women in Tech
/A Gentle Introduction to Higher-Order Components in React: Best Practices
/Challenge: Build a React Component
/A Gentle Introduction to HOC in React: Learn by Example
/A Gentle Introduction to Higher-Order Components in React
/Creating Pretty Popup Messages Using SweetAlert2
/Creating Stylish and Responsive Progress Bars Using ProgressBar.js
/18 Best Contact Form PHP Scripts for 2022
/How to Make a Real-Time Sports Application Using Node.js
/Creating a Blogging App Using Angular & MongoDB: Delete Post
/Set Up an OAuth2 Server Using Passport in Laravel
/Creating a Blogging App Using Angular & MongoDB: Edit Post
/Creating a Blogging App Using Angular & MongoDB: Add Post
/Introduction to Mocking in Python
/Creating a Blogging App Using Angular & MongoDB: Show Post
/Creating a Blogging App Using Angular & MongoDB: Home
/Creating a Blogging App Using Angular & MongoDB: Login
/Creating Your First Angular App: Implement Routing
/Persisted WordPress Admin Notices: Part 4
/Creating Your First Angular App: Components, Part 2
/Persisted WordPress Admin Notices: Part 3
/Creating Your First Angular App: Components, Part 1
/How Laravel Broadcasting Works
/Persisted WordPress Admin Notices: Part 2
/Create Your First Angular App: Storing and Accessing Data
/Persisted WordPress Admin Notices: Part 1
/Error and Performance Monitoring for Web & Mobile Apps Using Raygun
/Using Luxon for Date and Time in JavaScript
7 /How to Create an Audio Oscillator With the Web Audio API
/How to Cache Using Redis in Django Applications
/20 Essential WordPress Utilities to Manage Your Site
/Beginner’s Guide to Angular 4: HTTP
/Rapid Web Deployment for Laravel With GitHub, Linode, and RunCloud.io
/Beginners Guide to Angular 4: Routing
/Beginner’s Guide to Angular 4: Services
/Beginner’s Guide to Angular 4: Components
/Creating a Drop-Down Menu for Mobile Pages
/Introduction to Forms in Angular 4: Writing Custom Form Validators
/10 Best WordPress Booking & Reservation Plugins
/Getting Started With Redux: Connecting Redux With React
/Getting Started With Redux: Learn by Example
/Getting Started With Redux: Why Redux?
/Understanding Recursion With JavaScript
/How to Auto Update WordPress Salts
/How to Download Files in Python
/Eloquent Mutators and Accessors in Laravel
1 /10 Best HTML5 Sliders for Images and Text
/Creating a Task Manager App Using Ionic: Part 2
/Creating a Task Manager App Using Ionic: Part 1
/Introduction to Forms in Angular 4: Reactive Forms
/Introduction to Forms in Angular 4: Template-Driven Forms
/24 Essential WordPress Utilities to Manage Your Site
/25 Essential WordPress Utilities to Manage Your Site
/Get Rid of Bugs Quickly Using BugReplay
1 /Manipulating HTML5 Canvas Using Konva: Part 1, Getting Started
/10 Must-See Easy Digital Downloads Extensions for Your WordPress Site
/22 Best WordPress Booking and Reservation Plugins
/Understanding ExpressJS Routing
/15 Best WordPress Star Rating Plugins
/Creating Your First Angular App: Basics
/Inheritance and Extending Objects With JavaScript
/Introduction to the CSS Grid Layout With Examples
1Performant Animations Using KUTE.js: Part 5, Easing Functions and Attributes
Performant Animations Using KUTE.js: Part 4, Animating Text
/Performant Animations Using KUTE.js: Part 3, Animating SVG
/New Course: Code a Quiz App With Vue.js
/Performant Animations Using KUTE.js: Part 2, Animating CSS Properties
Performant Animations Using KUTE.js: Part 1, Getting Started
/10 Best Responsive HTML5 Sliders for Images and Text (Plus 3 Free Options)
/Single-Page Applications With ngRoute and ngAnimate in AngularJS
/Deferring Tasks in Laravel Using Queues
/Site Authentication in Node.js: User Signup and Login
/Working With Tables in React, Part Two
/Working With Tables in React, Part One
/How to Set Up a Scalable, E-Commerce-Ready WordPress Site Using ClusterCS
/New Course on WordPress Conditional Tags
/TypeScript for Beginners, Part 5: Generics
/Building With Vue.js 2 and Firebase
6 /Essential JavaScript Libraries and Frameworks You Should Know About
/Vue.js Crash Course: Create a Simple Blog Using Vue.js
/Build a React App With a Laravel RESTful Back End: Part 1, Laravel 5.5 API
/API Authentication With Node.js
/Beginner’s Guide to Angular: Routing
/Beginners Guide to Angular: Routing
/Beginner’s Guide to Angular: Services
/Beginner’s Guide to Angular: Components
/How to Create a Custom Authentication Guard in Laravel
/Learn Computer Science With JavaScript: Part 3, Loops
/Build Web Applications Using Node.js
/Learn Computer Science With JavaScript: Part 4, Functions
/Learn Computer Science With JavaScript: Part 2, Conditionals
/Create Interactive Charts Using Plotly.js, Part 5: Pie and Gauge Charts
/Create Interactive Charts Using Plotly.js, Part 4: Bubble and Dot Charts
/Create Interactive Charts Using Plotly.js, Part 3: Bar Charts
/Awesome JavaScript Libraries and Frameworks You Should Know About
/Create Interactive Charts Using Plotly.js, Part 2: Line Charts
/Bulk Import a CSV File Into MongoDB Using Mongoose With Node.js
/Build a To-Do API With Node, Express, and MongoDB
/Getting Started With End-to-End Testing in Angular Using Protractor
/TypeScript for Beginners, Part 4: Classes
/Object-Oriented Programming With JavaScript
/10 Best Affiliate WooCommerce Plugins Compared
/Stateful vs. Stateless Functional Components in React
/Make Your JavaScript Code Robust With Flow
/Build a To-Do API With Node and Restify
/Testing Components in Angular Using Jasmine: Part 2, Services
/Testing Components in Angular Using Jasmine: Part 1
/Creating a Blogging App Using React, Part 6: Tags
/React Crash Course for Beginners, Part 3
/React Crash Course for Beginners, Part 2
/React Crash Course for Beginners, Part 1
/Set Up a React Environment, Part 4
1 /Set Up a React Environment, Part 3
/New Course: Get Started With Phoenix
/Set Up a React Environment, Part 2
/Set Up a React Environment, Part 1
/Command Line Basics and Useful Tricks With the Terminal
/How to Create a Real-Time Feed Using Phoenix and React
/Build a React App With a Laravel Back End: Part 2, React
/Build a React App With a Laravel RESTful Back End: Part 1, Laravel 9 API
/Creating a Blogging App Using React, Part 5: Profile Page
/Pagination in CodeIgniter: The Complete Guide
/JavaScript-Based Animations Using Anime.js, Part 4: Callbacks, Easings, and SVG
/JavaScript-Based Animations Using Anime.js, Part 3: Values, Timeline, and Playback
/Learn to Code With JavaScript: Part 1, The Basics
/10 Elegant CSS Pricing Tables for Your Latest Web Project
/Getting Started With the Flux Architecture in React
/Getting Started With Matter.js: The Composites and Composite Modules
Getting Started With Matter.js: The Engine and World Modules
/10 More Popular HTML5 Projects for You to Use and Study
/Understand the Basics of Laravel Middleware
/Iterating Fast With Django & Heroku
/Creating a Blogging App Using React, Part 4: Update & Delete Posts
/Creating a jQuery Plugin for Long Shadow Design
/How to Register & Use Laravel Service Providers
2 /Unit Testing in React: Shallow vs. Static Testing
/Creating a Blogging App Using React, Part 3: Add & Display Post
/Creating a Blogging App Using React, Part 2: User Sign-Up
20 /Creating a Blogging App Using React, Part 1: User Sign-In
/Creating a Grocery List Manager Using Angular, Part 2: Managing Items
/9 Elegant CSS Pricing Tables for Your Latest Web Project
/Angular vs. React: 7 Key Features Compared
/Creating a Grocery List Manager Using Angular, Part 1: Add & Display Items
New eBooks Available for Subscribers in June 2017
/Create Interactive Charts Using Plotly.js, Part 1: Getting Started
/The 5 Best IDEs for WordPress Development (And Why)
/33 Popular WordPress User Interface Elements
/New Course: How to Hack Your Own App
/How to Install Yii on Windows or a Mac
/What Is a JavaScript Operator?
/How to Register and Use Laravel Service Providers
/
waly Good blog post. I absolutely love this…