I have multiple scenarios where, based on a condition, I need to do asynchronous processing and later proceed regardless of the path taken. This code works as I expect:
let processingComplete = new Promise(function (resolve, reject) { }); // create pending promise
let condition = true;
var wait = function () {
return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
setTimeout(resolve, 500);
});
}
if (condition) {
processingComplete = wait();
} else {
// do something else, synchronously
processingComplete = Promise.resolve();
}
processingComplete.then(() => {
console.log("entering processingComplete.then...")
});
However, if the promises are nested more than one deep the .then clause never fires. For example,
let processingComplete = new Promise(function (resolve, reject) { }); // create pending promise
let condition = true;
var wait = function () {
return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
setTimeout(resolve, 500);
});
}
if (condition) {
wait()
.then(() => {
processingComplete = wait() // nesting of promises
})
} else {
// do something else, synchronously
processingComplete = Promise.resolve();
}
processingComplete.then(() => {
// this code never fires with nested promises
console.log("entering processingComplete.then...")
});
I'm certainly familiar with using promises, but I'm not understanding why this does't work. I'd welcome any insights.
processingComplete
too late, AFTER you try to use it. You need to change your promises properly:processingComplete = wait().then(wait);