Why are promises complex? Because they complect a lot of semantics into a single operation.
define: complect
be interwoven or interconnected; "The bones are interconnected via the muscle".
Complection means that many different operations are interwoven and interconnected into a single thing.
In the case of promises, this single thing is .then()
Say you want to transform the value within a promise. This should be a simple operation.
Let's say we have a promise for a HttpResponse
and we want to create a promise for the body.
var body = map(response, function (response) {
return response.body
})
map
is very simple to implement.
function map(promise, lambda) {
return new Promise(function (resolve, reject) {
promise.then(function (x) { resolve(lambda(x)) }, reject)
})
}
Say you want to asynchronously transform the value within a promise.
This is also a simple operation. Let's say we want to stat a file and then read it.
var file = chain(stat(file), function (stat) {
return read(file)
})
chain
is very simple to implement.
function chain(promise, lambda) {
return new Promise(function (resolve, reject) {
promise.then(function (value) {
lambda(value).then(resolve, reject)
}, reject)
})
}
//TODO
function either(promise, recover, lambda) {
return new Promise(function (resolve, reject) {
promise.then(function (value) {
lambda ? lambda(value).then(resolve, reject) : resolve(value)
}, function (error) {
recover(error).then(resolve, reject)
})
})
}
//TODO
function cache(promise) {
var cached, resolves, rejects
return new Promise(function (resolve, reject) {
if (cached) {
return (cached.v ? resolve(cached.v) : reject(cached.e))
} else if (resolves) {
return resolves.push(resolve), rejects.push(reject)
}
resolves = [resolve], rejects = [reject]
promise.then(function (value) {
cached = { v: value }
resolves.forEach(function (r) { r(value) })
}, function (error) {
cached = { e: error }
rejects.forEach(function (r) { r(error) })
})
})
}
In the recommended usage pattern for interacting with promises you just use then()
for all
four of these use cases. A single method overloaded to support all of them.
Each one of these operations is very easy to write (<10 loc). Yet for some reason the popular approach is to complect them into a single operation?
function Promise(handler) {
return { then: function (f, r) { handler(f, r) } }
}
Combined with the primitives for sync (map) / async transformation (chain), error handling (either) and shared computation (cache). We can have a full promise implementation in a mere 50 lines.
This is also illustrates that the greatest amount of complexity lies in shared computation because it actually has to deal with shared state and that is complex.
To make things worse, there is talk of extending the already incredibly complex and complected operation of .then()
to
incorporate progress events, which means it should be able to handle "streaming" use-cases.
Streams are incredibly complex in their own right. The union of { map, chain, either, cache } and all stream operations
in a single .then()
method sounds pretty crazy.
@killdream I don't really understand what your example is showing?
Id also like to try clarify my previous comment with an analogy of programming to film making. Films are made up of frames sequenced together on a roll of tape. A computation, A.K.A function call, is like a frame. And
then
connects computations so is like the films tape.Of cause both are important but definitely separate. I guess its probably best to ignore the specs if your actually trying to understand this stuff.