401

What is the difference between:

new Promise(function(res, rej) {
    res("aaa");
  })
  .then(function(result) {
    return "bbb"; // directly returning string
  })
  .then(function(result) {
    console.log(result);
  });

and this:

new Promise(function(res, rej) {
    res("aaa");
  })
  .then(function(result) {
    return Promise.resolve("bbb"); // returning a promise
  })
  .then(function(result) {
    console.log(result);
  });

I'm asking as I'm getting different behaviour Using Angular and $http service with chaining .then(). A bit too much code hence first the example above.

6
  • 2
    What "different behavior" are you seeing? Both examples should work and behave approximately the same. The Promise.resolve() in the second example is unnecessary.
    – JLRishe
    Dec 31, 2014 at 5:13
  • 7
    @pixelbits There is nothing wrong whatsoever with returning a promise from a then handler, in fact, it's a key aspect of the promises spec that you can do that.
    – user663031
    Dec 31, 2014 at 5:47
  • 2
    in line 2 why do you have to call res("aaa"), why can't return "aaa" be sufficient and the Promise catch for resolve() it in the same way that it catches exceptions for reject() ? Nov 9, 2016 at 14:41
  • 2
    @SamLiddicott having the same question, while mines are a bit more complicate: new Promise((res, rej) => { return fetch('//google.com').then(() => { return "haha"; }) }).then((result) => alert(result)); This code will just hang (not resolved forever). But if I change return "haha"; to return res("haha"); then it'll work and alert "haha". Didn't the fetch().then() already wrap "haha" into a resolved promise?
    – Shawn
    Mar 11, 2020 at 23:44
  • 3
    @ShaungCheng if you use the Promise constructor, you should call the res parameter of the function passed instead of returning the result. Returning anything inside of the function passed to the Promise constructor will be ignored
    – attempt0
    Jun 8, 2021 at 11:54

6 Answers 6

203

In simple terms, inside a then handler function:

A) When x is a value (number, string, etc):

  1. return x is equivalent to return Promise.resolve(x)
  2. throw x is equivalent to return Promise.reject(x)

B) When x is a Promise that is already settled (not pending anymore):

  1. return x is equivalent to return Promise.resolve(x), if the Promise was already resolved.
  2. return x is equivalent to return Promise.reject(x), if the Promise was already rejected.

C) When x is a Promise that is pending:

  1. return x will return a pending Promise, and it will be evaluated on the subsequent then.

Read more on this topic on the Promise.prototype.then() docs.

3
  • 1
    【B) 2.】should be "throw x" ?
    – Lancer.Yan
    Jul 4, 2020 at 9:56
  • 2
    @Lancer.Yan Not really, what B is indicating is that the behavior of return changes depending on the settled value of the Promise. When writing the code you don't really know if it will resolve or reject. Of course, you can have a try-catch to handle rejects and then re-throw, but that's a different scenario. Jul 6, 2020 at 13:49
  • 1
    This is the best summary of the spec I've seen. Mar 7, 2023 at 20:41
154

The rule is, if the function that is in the then handler returns a value, the promise resolves/rejects with that value, and if the function returns a promise, what happens is, the next then clause will be the then clause of the promise the function returned, so, in this case, the first example falls through the normal sequence of the thens and prints out values as one might expect, in the second example, the promise object that gets returned when you do Promise.resolve("bbb")'s then is the then that gets invoked when chaining(for all intents and purposes). The way it actually works is described below in more detail.

Quoting from the Promises/A+ spec:

The promise resolution procedure is an abstract operation taking as input a promise and a value, which we denote as [[Resolve]](promise, x). If x is a thenable, it attempts to make promise adopt the state of x, under the assumption that x behaves at least somewhat like a promise. Otherwise, it fulfills promise with the value x.

This treatment of thenables allows promise implementations to interoperate, as long as they expose a Promises/A+-compliant then method. It also allows Promises/A+ implementations to “assimilate” nonconformant implementations with reasonable then methods.

The key thing to notice here is this line:

if x is a promise, adopt its state [3.4]

link: https://promisesaplus.com/#point-49

5
  • 5
    "Adopt its state" is a concise and useful way to express the behavior when a then handler returns a promise. +1 for the spec reference.
    – user663031
    Dec 31, 2014 at 6:32
  • 80
    Actually - the relevant part of the spec here is the fact that [[Resolve]] is called both on thenables and values so essentially it wraps a value with the promise so return "aaa" is the same as return Promise.resolve("aaa") and return Promise.resolve("aaa") is the same as return Promise.resolve(Promise.resolve("aaa")) - since resolve is idempotent calling it on a value more than once has the same result. Dec 31, 2014 at 7:20
  • 11
    @Benjamin Gruenbaum does it mean that return "aaa" and return Promise.resolve("aaa") are interchangeable in thenables in any cases?
    – CSnerd
    Dec 6, 2015 at 19:10
  • 13
    Yes, that's exactly what it means. Dec 6, 2015 at 20:01
  • "if the function that is in the then handler returns a value, the promise resolves/rejects with that value," I think the answer should clarify when the promise resolves and when it rejects instead of saying "the promise resolves/rejects".
    – elMeroMero
    Aug 13, 2020 at 13:39
105

Both of your examples should behave pretty much the same.

A value returned inside a then() handler becomes the resolution value of the promise returned from that then(). If the value returned inside the .then is a promise, the promise returned by then() will "adopt the state" of that promise and resolve/reject just as the returned promise does.

In your first example, you return "bbb" in the first then() handler, so "bbb" is passed into the next then() handler.

In your second example, you return a promise that is immediately resolved with the value "bbb", so "bbb" is passed into the next then() handler. (The Promise.resolve() here is extraneous).

The outcome is the same.

If you can show us an example that actually exhibits different behavior, we can tell you why that is happening.

2
  • 1
    Nice answer! What about Promise.resolve(); vs return;?
    – FabianTe
    May 29, 2018 at 12:06
  • 3
    @FabianTe Those also would have the same effect, except with undefined instead of "bbb".
    – JLRishe
    May 29, 2018 at 19:42
54

You already got a good formal answer. I figured I should add a short one.

The following things are identical with Promises/A+ promises:

  • Calling Promise.resolve (In your Angular case that's $q.when)
  • Calling the promise constructor and resolving in its resolver. In your case that's new $q.
  • Returning a value from a then callback.
  • Calling Promise.all on an array with a value and then extract that value.

So the following are all identical for a promise or plain value X:

Promise.resolve(x);
new Promise(function(resolve, reject){ resolve(x); });
Promise.resolve().then(function(){ return x; });
Promise.all([x]).then(function(arr){ return arr[0]; });

And it's no surprise, the promises specification is based on the Promise Resolution Procedure which enables easy interoperation between libraries (like $q and native promises) and makes your life overall easier. Whenever a promise resolution might occur a resolution occurs creating overall consistency.

4
  • may I ask what's the point in doing Promise.resolve().then(function(){ return x; });? I found a snipped doing something similar (it called a function inside the then block). I thought it was more or less like doing a timeout, but it's a bit faster. jsben.ch/HIfDo
    – Sampgun
    Feb 13, 2020 at 10:43
  • There is no point it's the same as Promise.resolve(x) in 99.99% of cases. (the 0.001% is that we are in a with block over an object or proxy with an x property accessor that throws an exception. In that case Promise.resolve(x) would cause a thrown error but Promise.resolve().then(function(){ return x; }); would be a rejected promise since the error is thrown in a then). Feb 13, 2020 at 20:49
  • you linked an empty blitz, or you didn't save. Anyway I wasn't talking about the differences among statements. I was talking precisely about what I wrote. Just to be more clear, this is the snippet I was talking about: if (validator) { Promise.resolve().then(() => { this._cdRef.markForCheck(); }); }. Here the promise isn't assigned, so what's the point? A timeout would have (more or less) the same effect, or not?
    – Sampgun
    Feb 14, 2020 at 8:01
  • 1
    It performs the call asynchronously after all synchronous code has happened but before any I/O happens. That's called "microtick semantics". Feb 14, 2020 at 17:12
2

The only difference is that you're creating an unnecessary promise when you do return Promise.resolve("bbb"). Returning a promise from an onFulfilled() handler kicks off promise resolution. That's how promise chaining works.

0

Just a point. The 'resolve' function does not return as you can see in a debugger. It seems to return if it is the last statement. 'Resolve' will set the promise as fullfilled but continue execution if there are more statements below.

As you can read here: 'Why does javascript ES6 Promises continue execution after a resolve?'

This was very confusing for me because it is not explained in most examples. So from now on, I have to remember to use 'return resolve(value)' or an 'if resolve(value) else ...other code' or just use 'resolve' as the last statement.

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