- Avoid callback hell with this ultra-simple wrapper for your functions.
- Easily streamline node's first-argument-as-error style callbacks.
- Automatically wrap entire APIs, such as node's
fs
. - Allows easy currying of functions to an arbitrarily defined depth
- Deferred execution: passing a function call without ugly
function(){}
syntax. (See example)
Serving suggestion: combine with async for added flavour (see recipe.)
In one line of code, turn node's fs.stat into a promise-like API! Toss if (err)
to the curb!
var yoyaku = require("yoyaku");
var exists = yoyaku.yepnope(require("fs").stat);
// Now, use it!
exists("foo.txt")
.nope(function() {
console.log("No - we'd better create that file!");
})
.yep(function() {
console.log("Yeah my file exists!");
})
The more flexible method that allows any function to be wrapped:
var yoyaku = require("yoyaku");
function existsInt(file,promises) {
fs.stat(file,function(err,data) {
if (err) return promises.enoent();
promises.exists(data);
});
}
var exists = yoyaku(["exists","enoent"],existsInt);
exists("./foo.txt")
.exists(successFunc)
.enoent(failFunc);
Automatically wrapping an entire API for easy promisey access:
var yoyaku = require("yoyaku"),
fs = yoyaku.api(require("fs"));
fs.readFile("foo.txt")
.yep(function(data) {
// do something with the file data
});
If you're using it in the browser, simply include yoyaku.js in your page.
If you're using node, simply npm install yoyaku
.
This won't banish callback hell completely. But used in conjunction with other techniques, it'll certainly help.
Yoyaku
does not mean promise in Japanese - it means 'reservation', 'contract',
or 'agreement'. Since this isn't strictly a promise API, rather, a promise-like
API, I decided to use a promise-like word to describe it. Hence, yoyaku.
I find this makes async much more palatable. This is a very small example that I think demonstrates how Yoyaku cleans up the callback syntax.
var yoyaku = require("yoyaku"),
async = yoyaku.api(require("async")),
fs = require("fs"),
write = yoyaku.yepnope(fs.writeFile),
each = async.each;
files = [ "foo.txt", "bar.txt", "baz.txt" ];
each(files,fs.readFile)
.yep(function(data) {
write("combined.txt",data.join("\n"))
.yep(somethingToDoWhenFinished);
});
function somethingToDoWhenFinished() {
console.log("It all worked awesomely!")
}
Deferred execution lets you omit function-expression syntax when passing wrapped
functions as callbacks. Instead of calling the function directly, call .defer
on it and pass in the arguments you normally would.
Take this example for instance:
var yoyaku = require("yoyaku"),
mkdirp = yoyaku.yepnope(require("mkdirp")),
exists = yoyaku.yepnope(require("fs").stat);
function createDirIfMissing(path,callback) {
exists(path)
.yep(callback)
.nope(
mkdirp.defer(path)
.yep(callback));
}
The function simply takes a filepath, and creates the directory specified by the path if it does not already exist. Writing the function without deferred execution and Yoyaku would look like:
var mkdirp = require("mkdirp"),
fs = require("fs");
function createDirIfMissing(path,callback) {
fs.stat(path,function(err) {
if (!err) return callback();
mkdirp(path,function(err) {
if (err) throw err;
callback();
});
});
}
It's not the reduced line count (5 vs 7 SLOC) that is the main factor in Yoyaku's favour - rather the terseness of the code, and the lack of non-specific cruft, like handlers for error callbacks and function expressions. This has let me be more expressive and feel less hindered by callback-coding in my own work. I hope it works for you too.
Wraps a single function in another function that manages promises and callbacks.
Passes all the arguments the wrapper function was called with through to the
wrapped function, but adds an additional argument on the end: an map of functions
named according to the array which was passed to yoyaku
when it was invoked.
Automatically converts node-style callback APIs (callback as last parameter, error condition passed as first parameter to callback if applicable) to a promise-like API.
The returned promises are .yep
and .nope
, hence the name of the method.
If you do not specify a handler for .nope
, it will throw an exception should the
method fail. This is desirable behaviour (there's nothing worse than invisible errors
quietly multiplying inside a program!)
Runs yoyaku.yepnope
against every function parameter of an object, and saves the
newly wrapped functions on a new object. Essentially this converts an entire API
to a promise-like interface.
Defers execution of the function as described in the deferred execution section of the document above. Takes an arbitrary list of arguments and stores/caches them against a function which it then returns. Executing this returned function will in turn execute the originally wrapped function with these arguments.
This function actually calls wrappedFunction.curry(0, [args])
behind the scenes.
Curries the wrapped function. The first parameter tells Yoyaku how many arguments to require before the wrapped function is executed. Any successive parameters are cached, and passed to the final function in order.
Until the required number of parameters has been reached or exceeded, Yoyaku will return a function, which has promise setters available as object methods.
Contains a reference to the returned promise map generated the last time the wrapped function was called, deferred, or curried. This enables greater brevity, but potentially enables race conditions where the wrapped function might be used simultaneously somewhere else. Use only where you can guarantee linear execution.
yoyaku.yepnope(fs.stat);
fs.stat("myfile");
// do something else
fs.stat.last.yep(function() {});
npm test
Copyright (c) 2013, Christopher Giffard All rights reserved.
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