I find it's often useful when dealing with async issues in JS to move and name all anonymous functions, temporarily, to explicitly show when they are being passed and when they are being invoked.
function makediffbotAPIcall(item, array) {
var url_to_send_diffbot = "string of url here"
var receiveResponse = function (error, response, body) {
if (!error && response.statusCode == 200) {
var article_object = JSON.parse(body);
var object = {"Title": article_object.title, "Url":article_object.url};
}
}
request(url_to_send_diffbot, receiveResponse);
return object;
}
So there are a few problems here. 1st, even if your request was synchronous (which would be a terrible thing, for poor old single threaded javascript), this would not work because you use var object
inside receiveResponse
, so that variable will not be available outside that function!
For this particular problem, the simplest solution is to call console.log(object)
inside receiveResponse
. Assuming you've actually simplified some code that does something more complicated, there are a variety of patterns available. Is it important that each request happens sequentially after the previous one, or is it ok to run in parallel and log separately (possibly out of order)? Basically, you'll want to either add a callback param to makediffbotAPIcall
and invoke that function with object
inside responseReceived
, or return a Promise object, which is probably overkill unless you're already using a framework/library that provides them, or you really need lots of support for parallel and/or sequential operations.
I re-read you're question and it looks like you want blocking behaviour, here's a pure JS solution (no lib required =P) using recursion:
var i=0;
var callNext = function(object){
if(i<out.items.length) {
makediffbotAPIcall(out.items[i], callNext);
}
console.log(object);
i++;
}
callNect("nothing to log for first obj");
function makediffbotAPIcall(item, array, callback) {
var url_to_send_diffbot = "string of url here"
var receiveResponse = function (error, response, body) {
if (!error && response.statusCode == 200) {
var article_object = JSON.parse(body);
var object = {"Title": article_object.title, "Url":article_object.url};
callback(object);
}
}
request(url_to_send_diffbot, receiveResponse);
}
This could do with some tidying (the base case for recursion is handled awkwardly) but you don't always need a library ;)