5

I have this class:

(function(){
"use strict";

var FileRead = function() {
    this.init();
};


p.read = function(file) {

    var fileReader = new FileReader();
    var deferred = $.Deferred();

    fileReader.onload = function(event) {
        deferred.resolve(event.target.result);
    };

    fileReader.onerror = function() {
        deferred.reject(this);
    };

    fileReader.readAsDataURL(file);

    return deferred.promise();

};

lx.FileRead = FileRead;
}(window));

The class is called in a loop:

var self = this;
    $.each(files, function(index, file){
        self.fileRead.read(file).done(function(fileB64){self.fileShow(file, fileB64, fileTemplate);});

    });

My question is, is there a way to call a method once the loop has completed and self.fileRead has returned it's deferred for everything in the loop?

I want it to call the method even if one or more of the deferred fails.

3
  • 1
    Isn't that what .always() is for?
    – DevlshOne
    Jun 16, 2014 at 13:43
  • 1
    You should use a better promise library. Jun 16, 2014 at 13:53
  • Does .read use any methods internally on the object? Is there any reason it's an instance method? Jun 16, 2014 at 14:08

4 Answers 4

3

$.when lets you wrap up multiple promises into one. Other promise libraries have something similar. Build up an array of promises returned by fileRead.read and then pass that array to $.when and hook up then/done/fail/always methods to the promise returned by .when

    // use map instead of each and put that inside a $.when call
    $.when.apply(null, $.map(files, function(index, file){
        // return the resulting promise
        return self.fileRead.read(file).done(function(fileB64){self.fileShow(file, fileB64, fileTemplate);});

    }).done(function() {  

      //now everything is done 
    })
3
  • there are examples in the docs and googling will find you more now that you know the name of the api to use api.jquery.com/jquery.when Jun 16, 2014 at 13:48
  • @BenjaminGruenbaum - agreed. I further commented in an answer below Jun 16, 2014 at 15:17
  • Why is this answer accepted when it doesn't address the requirement, "to call the method even if one or more of the deferred fails."? Jun 18, 2014 at 1:01
0
var self = this;
var processFiles = function (data) {
    var promises = [];
    $.each(files, function (index, file) {
        var def = data.fileRead.read(file);
        promises.push(def);
    });
    return $.when.apply(undefined, promises).promise();
}

self.processFiles(self).done(function(results){ 
    //do stuff
});

$.when says "when all these promises are resolved... do something". It takes an infinite (variable) number of parameters. In this case, you have an array of promises;

0

I know this is closed but as the doc states for $.when: In the multiple-Deferreds case where one of the Deferreds is rejected, jQuery.when immediately fires the failCallbacks for its master Deferred. (emphasis on immediately is mine)

If you want to complete all Deferreds even when one fails, I believe you need to come up with your own plugin along those lines below. The $.whenComplete function expects an array of functions that return a JQueryPromise.

    var whenComplete = function (promiseFns) {
        var me = this;
        return $.Deferred(function (dfd) {
            if (promiseFns.length === 0) {
                dfd.resolve([]);
            } else {
                var numPromises = promiseFns.length;
                var failed = false;
                var args;
                var resolves = [];

                promiseFns.forEach(function (promiseFn) {
                    try  {
                        promiseFn().fail(function () {
                            failed = true;
                            args = arguments;
                        }).done(function () {
                            resolves.push(arguments);
                        }).always(function () {
                            if (--numPromises === 0) {
                                if (failed) {
                                    //Reject with the last error
                                    dfd.reject.apply(me, args);
                                } else {
                                    dfd.resolve(resolves);
                                }
                            }
                        });
                    } catch (e) {
                        var msg = 'Unexpected error processing promise. ' + e.message;
                        console.error('APP> ' + msg, promiseFn);
                        dfd.reject.call(me, msg, promiseFn);
                    }
                });
            }
        }).promise();
    };
0

To address the requirement, "to call the method even if one or more of the deferred fails" you ideally want an .allSettled() method but jQuery doesn't have that particular grain of sugar, so you have to do a DIY job :

You could find/write a $.allSettled() utility or achieve the same effect with a combination of .when() and .then() as follows :

var self = this;
$.when.apply(null, $.map(files, function(index, file) {
    return self.fileRead.read(file).then(function(fileB64) {
        self.fileShow(file, fileB64, fileTemplate);
        return fileB64;//or similar
    }, function() {
        return $.when();//or similar
    });
})).done(myMethod);

If it existed, $.allSettled() would do something similar internally.

Next, "in myMethod, how to distinguish the good responses from the errors?", but that's another question :)

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