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You're reading from  JavaScript Design Patterns

Product typeBook
Published inMar 2024
Reading LevelIntermediate
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781804612279
Edition1st Edition
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Hugo Di Francesco
Hugo Di Francesco
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Hugo Di Francesco

Hugo Di Francesco is a software engineer who has worked extensively with JavaScript. He holds a MEng degree in mathematical computation from University College London (UCL). He has used JavaScript across the stack to create scalable and performant platforms at companies such as Canon and Elsevier and in industries such as print on demand and mindfulness. He is currently tackling problems in the travel industry at Eurostar with Node.js, TypeScript, React, and Kubernetes while running the eponymous Code with Hugo website. Outside of work, he is an international fencer, in the pursuit of which he trains and competes across the globe.
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Controlling sequential asynchronous operations with async/await and Promises

Promises were introduced in ES2015 (ES6), along with other modern data structures.

For those familiar with JavaScript prior to ES2015, asynchronous behavior was modeled with callback-based interfaces, for example, request(url, (error, response) => { /* do work with response */ }). The key issues that Promises resolved were the chaining of asynchronous requests and issues around managing parallel requests, which we’ll cover in this section.

ES2016 included the initial specification for the async/await syntax. It built on top of the Promise object in order to write asynchronous code that didn’t involve “Promise chains,” where different Promises are processed using the Promise().then function. Promise functionality and async/await interoperate nicely. In fact, calling an async function returns a Promise.

We’ll start by showing how to use Promises to manage sequential...

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JavaScript Design Patterns
Published in: Mar 2024Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781804612279

Author (1)

author image
Hugo Di Francesco

Hugo Di Francesco is a software engineer who has worked extensively with JavaScript. He holds a MEng degree in mathematical computation from University College London (UCL). He has used JavaScript across the stack to create scalable and performant platforms at companies such as Canon and Elsevier and in industries such as print on demand and mindfulness. He is currently tackling problems in the travel industry at Eurostar with Node.js, TypeScript, React, and Kubernetes while running the eponymous Code with Hugo website. Outside of work, he is an international fencer, in the pursuit of which he trains and competes across the globe.
Read more about Hugo Di Francesco