I have a function which issues two async requests before yielding some data.
The caller of the method does not need to know about its implementation details. All the caller needs is:
The data returned from the second request.
The ability to call abort and not be returned data.
This is complicated by the fact that abort can be called after the first promise is done. The second request is already in-flight, but the caller has yet to receive data. So, the caller assumes it can call abort, but rejecting the first promise will have no effect.
I work around this issue with the following, but it feels pretty hacky. Am I missing something?
var ajaxOptions = {
url: 'https://www.googleapis.com/youtube/v3/search',
data: {
part: 'id',
key: 'AIzaSyDBCJuq0aey3bL3K6C0l4mKzT_y8zy9Msw',
q: 'Hello'
}
};
function search(options) {
var jqXHR = $.ajax(ajaxOptions);
var innerJqXHR = null;
jqXHR.then(function(data, statusText, jqXHR) {
innerJqXHR = $.ajax(ajaxOptions);
innerJqXHR.done(options.done);
innerJqXHR.fail(options.fail);
return innerJqXHR;
}, options.fail);
return {
promise: jqXHR,
innerPromise: innerJqXHR,
fullAbort: function() {
jqXHR.abort();
if (innerJqXHR !== null) {
innerJqXHR.abort();
}
}
}
}
var searchReturn = search({
done: function() {
console.log('inner done');
},
fail: function() {
console.log('inner or outer fail');
}
});
searchReturn.fullAbort();
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
Since your code looks a little like pseudo-code (unanswered questions in it for me), the best I can offer is a framework of an idea. The general idea is that you return two things from your search function, a promise that is resolved only when both ajax calls are resolved and an abort function that can be called to abort the process.
function search(options) {
var activeAjax = $.ajax(args for first ajax call).then(function(data) {
// second ajax call changes activeAjax so abort will work
// on the active ajax call
activeAjax = $.ajax(args for second ajax call).then(function(data) {
activeAjax = null;
// collect your final data here and return it
// this will be the resolved value of the final promise
return finalData;
});
return activeAjax;
});
return {
promise: activeAjax,
abort: function() {
if (activeAjax) {
activeAjax.abort();
}
}
};
}
// usage:
var searchInProgress = search(...);
searchInProgress.promise.then(function(data) {
// search finished successfully, answer is in data
}, function(err) {
// either one of the promises failed
});
// and, at any time, you can call searchInProgress.abort();
Related
I'm trying to make loop of ajax calls from an array and saving each data result that I'll print when all calls are successfully received.
The problem is that if there is any ajax call returning error, the whole process is aborted and the callback is not executed. (Try using listWithErrorResult)
How to push something on error without breaking the loop?
JSFIDDLE
var list = ['UQ13nr6urIo', 'hxa_Z0eZ83E', 'ulHB2mNlovg'];
var listWithErrorResult = ['UQ13nr6urIo', 'hxa_Z0eZ83E', 'IWEHeIdBkc4'];
var callback = function() {
console.log("done");
console.log(tracks);
};
var requests = [], tracks = [];
for(i = 0; i < list.length; i++) {
requests.push($.ajax({
url: 'http://www.youtubeinmp3.com/fetch/?format=JSON&video=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v='+list[i],
dataType: "json",
success: function(data) {
console.log('suc');
tracks.push(data);
},error: function() {
console.log('err');
tracks.push('err');
}
}));
}
$.when.apply(undefined, requests).then(function(results){callback()});
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
You can just attach a .then() handle to your ajax call and make sure every ajax call resolves rather than rejects. This will get you an array of results at the end that is guaranteed to include all your ajax calls.:
var callback = function(/* tracks are passed here as arguments */) {
console.log("done");
var tracks = Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments);
console.log(tracks);
};
var requests = [];
for(var i = 0; i < list.length; i++) {
requests.push($.ajax({
url: 'http://www.youtubeinmp3.com/fetch/?format=JSON&video=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v='+list[i],
dataType: "json",
}).then(function(data) {
return data;
}, function(err) {
// convert failure into success so $.when() doesn't stop
return $.Deferred().resolve('err');
}));
}
$.when.apply($, requests).then(callback);
You can also use a version of $.settle() that I wrote that lets all promises finish and gives you all results, even if some promises reject.
Instead of $.when() (which stops on the first rejected promise), you can use this new function $.settle() which returns you the results of all the promises. It returns an array of PromiseInspection objects which allow you to query the resolved value or rejected reason for each promise.
You use $.settle() just like $.when() except it returns all results in PromiseInspection objects and it always resolves (never rejects). Because of jQuery's non-standard means of passing multiple arguments to .then() handlers (particular Ajax calls), if .settle() detects multiple arguments, it copies them into an array so the PromiseInspection.value returned from a successful ajax call is an array [data, textStatus, jqXHR]. This is the worst part of jQuery's non-standard promises. Presumably this is fixed/changed in jQuery 3.x which is supposed to be standard's compliant. This code will work with either since it auto-detects if the .then() handler is sent more than one argument and converts them into a single array argument.
// ES6 version of settle
jQuery.settle = function(promises) {
function PromiseInspection(fulfilled, val) {
return {
isFulfilled: function() {
return fulfilled;
}, isRejected: function() {
return !fulfilled;
}, isPending: function() {
// PromiseInspection objects created here are never pending
return false;
}, value: function() {
if (!fulfilled) {
throw new Error("Can't call .value() on a promise that is not fulfilled");
}
return val;
}, reason: function() {
if (fulfilled) {
throw new Error("Can't call .reason() on a promise that is fulfilled");
}
return val;
}
};
}
return $.when.apply($, promises.map(function(p) {
return p.then(function(val) {
if (arguments.length > 1) {
val = Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments);
}
return new PromiseInspection(true, val);
}, function(err) {
if (arguments.length > 1) {
err = Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments);
}
return new PromiseInspection(false, err);
});
}));
}
You have to add error callback to $.when.apply then too as its an error condition when one of the call fails.
$.when.apply(undefined, requests).then(
function(results){callback()},
function(results){callback()}
);
Working jsBin here
Here is my code, it loops through forEach and prints out '1' but never returns from object.save() & never prints out 2, 3 or anything else. I have tried a bunch of other ways but none seems to work.
Note: response.succes(or error) is not being called anywhere, the code is definitely waiting for object.save() to be completed.
var promise = new Parse.Promise();
var query = new Parse.Query("SomeClass");
query.find().then(function(results) {
var promises = [];
results.forEach(function(object) {
object.set("SomeColumnName", true);
console.log('1');
promises.push(object.save(null, {
success: function(result) {
alert('2');
return ;
},
error: function(result, error) {
alert('3');
return ;
}
}));
});
Parse.Promise.when(promises).then(function() {
console.log('inside resolve');
promise.resolve();
}, function() {
console.log('inside reject');
promise.reject();
});
});
return promise;
You're on the right track, but you should take advantage of the fact that most of the sdk functions create and return promises for you. With those, you can substantially simplify the code:
// very handy utility library that provides _.each among many other things
// www.underscorejs.org
var _ = require('underscore');
// answer a promise to modify all instances of SomeClass
function changeSomeClass() {
var query = new Parse.Query("SomeClass");
// if there are more than 100 rows, set query.limit up to 1k
return query.find().then(function(results) { // find returns a promise
_.each(results, function(result) {
result.set("SomeColumnName", true);
});
return Parse.Object.saveAll(results); // and saveAll returns a promise
});
}
Wrap it in a cloud function and call success/error like this:
Parse.Cloud.define("changeSomeClass", function(request, response) {
changeSomeClass().then(function(result) {
response.success(result);
}, function(error) {
response.error(error);
});
});
You can only have one Parse request happening at a time for each object. If multiple requests are sent, all but the first are ignored. You're probably trying to do this while other threads are making Parse requests for those objects. I know that if you save an object, it also saves it's child objects, so you could be hitting a problem with that. Make sure you do as much as you can in background threads with completion blocks, or use saveEventually / fetchEventually where possible.
I have some code that will dynamically generate an AJAX request based off a scenario that I'm retrieving via an AJAX request to a server.
The idea is that:
A server provides a "Scenario" for me to generate an AJAX Request.
I generate an AJAX Request based off the Scenario.
I then repeat this process, over and over in a Loop.
I'm doing this with promises here: http://jsfiddle.net/3Lddzp9j/11/
However, I'm trying to edit the code above so I can handle an array of scenarios from the initial AJAX request.
IE:
{
"base": {
"frequency": "5000"
},
"endpoints": [
{
"method": "GET",
"type": "JSON",
"endPoint": "https://api.github.com/users/alvarengarichard",
"queryParams": {
"objectives": "objective1, objective2, objective3"
}
},
{
"method": "GET",
"type": "JSON",
"endPoint": "https://api.github.com/users/dkang",
"queryParams": {
"objectives": "objective1, objective2, objective3"
}
}
]
This seems like it would be straight forward, but the issue seems to be in the "waitForTimeout" function.
I'm unable to figure out how to run multiple promise chains. I have an array of promises in the "deferred" variable, but the chain only continues on the first one--despite being in a for loop.
Could anyone provide insight as to why this is? You can see where this is occuring here: http://jsfiddle.net/3Lddzp9j/10/
The main problems are that :
waitForTimeout isn't passing on all the instructions
even if waitForTimeout was fixed, then callApi isn't written to perform multiple ajax calls.
There's a number of other issues with the code.
you really need some data checking (and associated error handling) to ensure that expected components exist in the data.
mapToInstruction is an unnecessary step - you can map straight from data to ajax options - no need for an intermediate data transform.
waitForTimeout can be greatly simplified to a single promise, resolved by a single timeout.
synchronous functions in a promise chain don't need to return a promise - they can return a result or undefined.
Sticking with jQuery all through, you should end up with something like this :
var App = (function ($) {
// Gets the scenario from the API
// sugar for $.ajax with GET as method - NOTE: this returns a promise
var getScenario = function () {
console.log('Getting scenario ...');
return $.get('http://demo3858327.mockable.io/scenario2');
};
var checkData = function (data) {
if(!data.endpoints || !data.endpoints.length) {
return $.Deferred().reject('no endpoints').promise();
}
data.base = data.base || {};
data.base.frequency = data.base.frequency || 1000;//default value
};
var waitForTimeout = function(data) {
return $.Deferred(function(dfrd) {
setTimeout(function() {
dfrd.resolve(data.endpoints);
}, data.base.frequency);
}).promise();
};
var callApi = function(endpoints) {
console.log('Calling API with given instructions ...');
return $.when.apply(null, endpoints.map(ep) {
return $.ajax({
type: ep.method,
dataType: ep.type,
url: ep.endpoint
}).then(null, function(jqXHR, textStatus, errorThrown) {
return textStatus;
});
}).then(function() {
//convert arguments to an array of results
return $.map(arguments, function(arg) {
return arg[0];
});
});
};
var handleResults = function(results) {
// results is an array of data values/objects returned by the ajax calls.
console.log("Handling data ...");
...
};
// The 'run' method
var run = function() {
getScenario()
.then(checkData)
.then(waitForTimeout)
.then(callApi)
.then(handleResults)
.then(null, function(reason) {
console.error(reason);
})
.then(run);
};
return {
run : run
}
})(jQuery);
App.run();
This will stop on error but could be easily adapted to continue.
I'll try to answer your question using KrisKowal's q since I'm not very proficient with the promises generated by jQuery.
First of all I'm not sure whether you want to solve the array of promises in series or in parallel, in the solution proposed I resolved all of them in parallel :), to solve them in series I'd use Q's reduce
function getScenario() { ... }
function ajaxRequest(instruction) { ... }
function createPromisifiedInstruction(instruction) {
// delay with frequency, not sure why you want to do this :(
return Q.delay(instruction.frequency)
.then(function () {
return this.ajaxRequest(instruction);
});
}
function run() {
getScenario()
.then(function (data) {
var promises = [];
var instruction;
var i;
for (i = 0; i < data.endpoints.length; i += 1) {
instruction = {
method: data.endpoints[i].method,
type: data.endpoints[i].type,
endpoint: data.endpoints[i].endPoint,
frequency: data.base.frequency
};
promises.push(createPromisifiedInstruction(instruction));
}
// alternative Q.allSettled if all the promises don't need to
// be fulfilled (some of them might be rejected)
return Q.all(promises);
})
.then(function (instructionsResults) {
// instructions results is an array with the result of each
// promisified instruction
})
.then(run)
.done();
}
run();
Ok let me explain the solution above:
first of all assume that getScenario gets you the initial json you start with (actually returns a promise which is resolved with the json)
create the structure of each instruction
promisify each instruction, so that each one is actually a promise whose
resolution value will be the promise returned by ajaxRequest
ajaxRequest returns a promise whose resolution value is the result of the request, which also means that createPromisifiedInstruction resolution value will be the resolution value of ajaxRequest
Return a single promise with Q.all, what it actually does is fulfill itself when all the promises it was built with are resolved :), if one of them fails and you actually need to resolve the promise anyways use Q.allSettled
Do whatever you want with the resolution value of all the previous promises, note that instructionResults is an array holding the resolution value of each promise in the order they were declared
Reference: KrisKowal's Q
Try utilizing deferred.notify within setTimeout and Number(settings.frequency) * (1 + key) as setTimeout duration; msg at deferred.notify logged to console at deferred.progress callback , third function argument within .then following timeout
var App = (function ($) {
var getScenario = function () {
console.log("Getting scenario ...");
return $.get("http://demo3858327.mockable.io/scenario2");
};
var mapToInstruction = function (data) {
var res = $.map(data.endpoints, function(settings, key) {
return {
method:settings.method,
type:settings.type,
endpoint:settings.endPoint,
frequency:data.base.frequency
}
});
console.log("Instructions recieved:", res);
return res
};
var waitForTimeout = function(instruction) {
var res = $.when.apply(instruction,
$.map(instruction, function(settings, key) {
return new $.Deferred(function(dfd) {
setTimeout(function() {
dfd.notify("Waiting for "
+ settings.frequency
+ " ms")
.resolve(settings);
}, Number(settings.frequency) * (1 + key));
}).promise()
})
)
.then(function() {
return this
}, function(err) {
console.log("error", err)
}
, function(msg) {
console.log("\r\n" + msg + "\r\nat " + $.now() + "\r\n")
});
return res
};
var callApi = function(instruction) {
console.log("Calling API with given instructions ..."
, instruction);
var res = $.when.apply(instruction,
$.map(instruction, function(request, key) {
return request.then(function(settings) {
return $.ajax({
type: settings.method,
dataType: settings.type,
url: settings.endpoint
});
})
})
)
.then(function(data) {
return $.map(arguments, function(response, key) {
return response[0]
})
})
return res
};
var handleResults = function(data) {
console.log("Handling data ..."
, JSON.stringify(data, null, 4));
return data
};
var run = function() {
getScenario()
.then(mapToInstruction)
.then(waitForTimeout)
.then(callApi)
.then(handleResults)
.then(run);
};
return {
// This will expose only the run method
// but will keep all other functions private
run : run
}
})($);
// ... And start the app
App.run();
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.11.1/jquery.min.js">
</script>
jsfiddle http://jsfiddle.net/3Lddzp9j/13/
You have a return statement in the loop in your waitForTimeout function. This means that the function is going to return after the first iteration of the loop, and that is where you are going wrong.
You're also using the deferred antipattern and are using promises in places where you don't need them. You don't need to return a promise from a then handler unless there's something to await.
The key is that you need to map each of your instructions to a promise. Array#map is perfect for this. And please use a proper promise library, not jQuery promises (edit but if you absolutely must use jQuery promises...):
var App = (function ($) {
// Gets the scenario from the API
// NOTE: this returns a promise
var getScenario = function () {
console.log('Getting scenario ...');
return $.get('http://demo3858327.mockable.io/scenario');
};
// mapToInstructions is basically unnecessary. each instruction does
// not need its own timeout if they're all the same value, and you're not
// reshaping the original values in any significant way
// This wraps the setTimeout into a promise, again
// so we can chain it
var waitForTimeout = function(data) {
var d = $.Deferred();
setTimeout(function () {
d.resolve(data.endpoints);
}, data.base.frequency);
return d.promise();
};
var callApi = function(instruction) {
return $.ajax({
type: instruction.method,
dataType: instruction.type,
url: instruction.endPoint
});
};
// Final step: call the API from the
// provided instructions
var callApis = function(instructions) {
console.log(instructions);
console.log('Calling API with given instructions ...');
return $.when.apply($, instructions.map(callApi));
};
var handleResults = function() {
var data = Array.prototype.slice(arguments);
console.log("Handling data ...");
};
// The 'run' method
var run = function() {
getScenario()
.then(waitForTimeout)
.then(callApis)
.then(handleResults)
.then(run);
};
return {
run : run
}
})($);
App.run();
when a function returns a promise, I can call some other function after the first one did it's work:
do_stuff().then(function(){
alert('yoooo');
});
and do_stuff() looks like this:
function do_stuff(){
if(!got_the_data){
var d = $.Deferred();
$.ajax({
success: function(html){
$('#box').append(html);
$('#box').addClass('visible');
$('#box').on('transitionend webkitTransitionEnd', function(){
got_the_data = true;
d.resolve();
});
}
});
return d.promise();
}else{
// got the data, what now?
}
}
but what do I return if I already did the ajax request (result is cached) and I don't have to wait for anything? I can't return d.resolve() because the function that was attached to then() won't fire :/
and I can't return d.promise because I have to resolve the "d" somewhere
You can choose between two approaches; caching data or caching promises.
Here's two examples, both of which key on url, though any other key may be used, as appropriate - as long as it uniquely identifies each individual case.
Cache data
var dataCache = {};
function do_stuff_1(url) {
if(dataCache[url] === undefined) {
return $.ajax({
url: url
}).then(function(data) {
dataCache[url] = data;
return data;
});
} else {
return $.when(dataCache[url]);
}
}
Cache promises
var promiseCache = {};
function do_stuff_2(url) {
if(!promiseCache[url]) {
promiseCache[url] = $.ajax({
url: url
});
}
return promiseCache[url];
}
In both approaches, the function will (barring an uncaught error) return a promise, either by executing $.ajax() or by retrieving data/promise from the cache.
In most applications, there's virtually nothing to distinguish one approach from the other.
In an application where the cache is likely to grow to be large, then cache the data and avoid the overhead of caching promise wrappers.
If necessary, the cache can be pre-loaded, thus avoiding the need to fetch known data :
var dataCache = {
'/path/to/data/a': 'A',
'/path/to/data/b': 'B'
}
or
var promiseCache = {
'/path/to/data/a': $.when('A'),
'/path/to/data/b': $.when('B')
}
The simplest solution is to just return an empty already-resolved promise in the else clause:
return $.Deferred().resolve();
To avoid the Promise anti-pattern your code might be better structured thus:
function show_stuff(html) {
return $.Deferred(function(def) {
$('#box').append(html);
$('#box').addClass('visible');
$('#box').on('transitionend webkitTransitionEnd', def.resolve);
});
}
function do_stuff() {
if (got_the_data) {
return $.Deferred().resolve();
} else {
return $.ajax(...).then(show_stuff);
}
}
Note that there's no line (yet) setting got_the_data = true - you should consider whether it's really appropriate to wait until the data has been displayed to set this flag, otherwise there's nothing to prevent multiple invocations of do_stuff all resulting in new stuff getting added to #box. IMHO you would be better with a getting_the_data flag.
I have to interact with a remote api that forces me to chain requests. Thats a callback-hell in asynchronous mode:
// pseudocode: ajax(request_object, callback)
ajax(a, function() {
ajax(b(a.somedata), function() {
ajax(c(b.somedata), function() {
c.finish()
}
})
})
It would be much more readable in sync mode:
sjax(a)
sjax(b(a.somedata))
sjax(c(b.somedata))
c.finish()
But Sjax is evil :) How do I do that in a nice not-so-evil and readable way?
You could have a single function which is passed an integer to state what step the request is in, then use a switch statement to figure out what request needs to be make next:
function ajaxQueue(step) {
switch(step) {
case 0: $.ajax({
type: "GET",
url: "/some/service",
complete: function() { ajaxQueue(1); }
}); break;
case 1: $.ajax({
type: "GET",
url: "/some/service",
complete: function() { ajaxQueue(2); }
}); break;
case 2: $.ajax({
type: "GET",
url: "/some/service",
complete: function() { alert('Done!'); }
}); break;
}
}
ajaxQueue(0);
Hope that helps!
Don't use anonymous functions. Give them names. I don't know if you're able to do what I wrote below though:
var step_3 = function() {
c.finish();
};
var step_2 = function(c, b) {
ajax(c(b.somedata), step_3);
};
var step_1 = function(b, a) {
ajax(b(a.somedata), step_2);
};
ajax(a, step_1);
This function should chain together a list of ajax requests, if the callbacks always return the parameters necessary for the next request:
function chainajax(params, callbacks) {
var cb = shift(callbacks);
params.complete = function() {
var newparams = cb(arguments);
if (callbacks)
chainajax(newparams, callbacks);
};
$.ajax(params);
};
You can define these callback functions separately and then chain them together:
function a(data) {
...
return {type: "GET", url: "/step2.php?foo"}
};
// ...
function d(data) { alert("done!"); };
chainajax({type: "GET", url: "/step1.php"},
[a, b, c, d]);
You could also declare the functions "inline" in the call to chainajax, but that might get a little confusing.
Maybe what you can do is write a server-side wrapper function. That way your javascript only does a single asynchronous call to your own web server. Then your web server uses curl (or urllib, etc.) to interact with the remote API.
Update: I've learn a better answer for this if you are using jQuery, see my update under the title: Using jQuery Deffered
Old answer:
You can also use Array.reduceRight (when it's available) to wrap the $.ajax calls and transform a list like: [resource1, resource2] into $.ajax({url:resource1,success: function(...) { $ajax({url: resource2... (a trick that I've learn from Haskell and it's fold/foldRight function).
Here is an example:
var withResources = function(resources, callback) {
var responses = [];
var chainedAjaxCalls = resources.reduceRight(function(previousValue, currentValue, index, array) {
return function() {
$.ajax({url: currentValue, success: function(data) {
responses.push(data);
previousValue();
}})
}
}, function() { callback.apply(null, responses); });
chainedAjaxCalls();
};
Then you can use:
withResources(['/api/resource1', '/api/resource2'], function(response1, response2) {
// called only if the ajax call is successful with resource1 and resource2
});
Using jQuery Deffered
If you are using jQuery, you can take advantage of jQuery Deffered, by using the jQuery.when() function:
jQuery.when($.get('/api/one'), $.get('/api/two'))
.done(function(result1, result2) {
/* one and two is done */
});
Check out this FAQ item on the jQuery site. Specially the callback reference and the complete method.
What you want is data from A to be passed to B and B's data passed to C. So you would do a callback on complete.
I haven't tried this though.
I believe that implementing a state machine will make the code more readable:
var state = -1;
var error = false;
$.ajax({success: function() {
state = 0;
stateMachine(); },
error: function() {
error = true;
stateMachine();
}});
function stateMachine() {
if (error) {
// Error handling
return;
}
if (state == 0) {
state = 1;
// Call stateMachine again in an ajax callback
}
else if (state == 1) {
}
}
I made a method using Promises
// How to setup a chainable queue method
var sequence = Promise.resolve();
function chain(next){
var promise = new Promise(function(resolve){
sequence.then(function(){
next(resolve);
});
});
sequence = promise;
}
// How to use it
chain(function(next){
document.write("<p>start getting config.json</p>");
setTimeout(function(){
document.write("<p>Done fetching config.json</p>");
next();
}, 3000);
});
chain(function(next){
document.write("<p>start getting init.js</p>")
setTimeout(function(){
document.write("<p>starting eval scripting</p>");
next();
}, 3000);
});
chain(function(next){
document.write("<p>Everything is done</p>");
});
Bonus: A ultraligth 138 byte limited A- Promise (that can only resolve - without parameters, and only call the last then-method )
Background:
I made this for node.js at the point where it dose not have promises ATM. I didn't want a complete full blown Promise library that I was dependent on and had to include in my package.json, I needed it to be fast and light and do mostly one thing only. I only needed it for one thing (chaining things like you want to)
function Q(a,b){b=this;a(function(){b.then&&b.then();b.then=i});return b}function i(a){a&&a()}Q.prototype={then:function(a){this.then=a}};
How?
// Start with a resolved object
var promise = new Q(function(a){a()});
// equal to
// var promise = Promise.resolve();
// example usage
new Q(function(resolve){
// do some async stuff that takes time
// setTimeout(resolve, 3000);
}).then(function(){
// its done
// can not return a new Promise
}); // <- can not add more then's (it only register the last one)
and for the chainable queue method
// How to setup a chainable queue method with ultraligth promise
var sequence = new Q(function(a){a()});
function chain(next){
var promise = new Q(function(resolve){
sequence.then(function(){
next(resolve);
});
});
sequence = promise;
}
The complete callback is what you're looking for:
$.ajax({
type: 'post',
url: "www.example.com",
data: {/* Data to be sent to the server. It is converted to a query string, if not already a string. It's appended to the url for GET-requests. */},
success:
function(data) {
/* you can also chain requests here. will be fired if initial request is successful but will be fired before completion. */
},
complete:
function() {
/* For more a more synchronous approach use this callback. Will be fired when first function is completed. */
}
});