Reputation: 896
If we know that a Promise
is definitely resolved, how can we access the value and if we can't, why not?
let a = Promise.resolve(123);
console.log(a.value); // ???
The following does not work- it prints "First, Last, 123"
console.log("First");
Promise.resolve(123).then(console.log);
console.log("Last");
I'm asking how to get the value of an already resolved Promise
synchronously and if that's not possible, why not?
Upvotes: 6
Views: 14010
Reputation: 99581
No, it is not possible to do this. This is by design.
The Promise A+ specification is meant to be used as a simple, consistent way to deal with asynchronous operations. One of the constraints is that passing a new callback on to then()
on an already resolved promise will always execute on a later tick in the event loop, so things are consistent.
Adding a secondary way to inspect promise results would not have been impossible. It would probably have been quite easy to do so, but there's at least 2 problems with adding this to the specification:
then()
function.Promises and asynchronous operations are hard for people to understand. I see questions here daily about promises and not 'getting' it. If non-async way to access promise results would be added to the default promise, I'd imagine that this would be an even larger amount. It's good to try and enforce 'the right way' of doing things.
However, this decision is not simply made for you. You're not stuck there. You can very easily build your own version of a promise that has this feature, and still works with existing promises. As long as your object has a then()
function that behaves according to Promises/A+ you can do with the rest of the object whatever you want.
Upvotes: 5
Reputation: 3520
Promises are always asynchronous in JS.
If you're confident that promise is going to resolve then you can access it with .then
method.
a.then(function(value) {
console.log("First");
console.log(value);
console.log("Last");
// expected output: 123
});
Variable a
will lookalike below if it is console.log
Promise {<resolved>: 123}
__proto__: Promise
[[PromiseStatus]]: "resolved"
[[PromiseValue]]: 123
For error handling, you can error block as mentioned in MDN docs.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 634
Promise.resolve(123).then(function(value) {
console.log(value);
}
Take a look on this
Upvotes: 0