More than once have I seen the following reduce function as a mapreduce usage example for mongodb:
function reduce(key, values) {
var result = {count:0};
values.forEach(function(value) {
result.count += value.count;
});
return result;
}
But this strikes me as very odd. The iterating is done with the .forEach() method which uses a callback function to do the counting. However, we return result; right away.
Can't it be the case sometimes that we return the result variable before the callback is done iterating through the values?
I thought the purpose of callbacks is that we delegate it to a (possibly) different thread while the main control flow continues normally.
forEach
is not asynchronous. But note that even when dealing with asynchronous behavior, it's fairly rare that you'll be dealing with multiple threads. There are growing possibilities for that in the Javascript landscape, but the language has traditionally been single-threaded.forEach
with simplefor
-loop.myReusableFunc = function(value) {results.count += value.count}
then you can simply callvalues.forEach(myReusableFunc);
, which is extremely clean.