0

I am looping over an array to update its values using returned value from called function which internally calls an asynchronous function.

I need to handle asynchronous function in synchronous way which is not being directly called. This is replication of scenario.

function condition(){
    // Code of this function is not accessible to me.
    return new Promise(function(resolve, reject){
        setTimeout(function(){
            if(parseInt(Math.random() * 100) % 2){
                resolve(true);
            }
            else{
                reject(false)
            }
        }, 1000)
    });
}

async function delayIncrease(value){
    var choice = await condition(); 

    if(choice) { return ++value; }
    else { return --value; }
}

// Start calling functions
dataArr = [1,2,3,4,5];
for(var i in dataArr){
    dataArr[i] = delayIncrease(dataArr[i]);
}

If possible, I would like to have the solution in above structure mentioned.

I have achieved the desired result by adding other function and passing "index" + "new_value" as parameters. This function directly modifies original array and produces desired result. Working example.

function condition(){
    // Code of this function is not accessible to me.
    return new Promise(function(resolve, reject){
        setTimeout(function(){
            if(parseInt(Math.random() * 100) % 2){
                resolve(true);
            }
            else{
                reject(false)
            }
        }, 1000)
    });
}

function delayIncrease(value, index){            
    condition().then(
        function(){ updateData(++value, index) },
        function(){ updateData(--value, index) }
    )
}

function updateData(value, index){
    dataArr[index] = value;          
}

dataArr = [1,2,3,4,5];
for(var i in dataArr){
    dataArr[i] = delayIncrease(dataArr[i], i);
}

Please provide solution for this requirement in best possible way. Possible solution in Angular 4 way is also appriciated. I thought of writing it in normal JavaScript form as Observables behave nearly same.

I followed this Medium page and http://exploringjs.com

5
  • What is the expected outcome?
    – FCin
    Dec 7, 2017 at 11:10
  • @FCin - Expected outcome should be decision capability depending upon Promise's approval/rejection. I just want to perform different operation on the original array. Desired behaviour is exactly same which I have managed in solution 2. But I think there should be better solution than that. Dec 7, 2017 at 11:13
  • If the code works, then I think this question is more suited for Code Review
    – FCin
    Dec 7, 2017 at 11:17
  • @FCin - The 1st solution/way doesn't work. I just managed to write 2nd solution which is not optimal one. Shall I still raise Code review request? Dec 7, 2017 at 11:19
  • It doesn't make much sense to have your functions be async when there is no async processing.
    – HMR
    Dec 7, 2017 at 11:24

2 Answers 2

2

Your condition function does not really fulfill the promise with either true or false, it does randomly fulfill or reject the promise. Instead of branching on a boolean, you will need to catch that "error":

async function delayIncrease(value) {
    try {
        await condition(); 
        return ++value;
    } catch(e) {
        return --value;
    }
}
0
1

You could do something like this:

var condition = async () =>
  (parseInt(Math.random() * 100) % 2)
    ? true
    : false

var delayIncrease =  async (value) =>
  (await condition())
    ? ++value
    : --value

var dataArr = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
// Start calling functions
Promise.all(
  dataArr.map(
    delayIncrease
  )
)
.then(
  resolve => console.log("results:",resolve)
  ,reject => console.warn("rejected:",reject)
)

Once something is async you have to make the entire call stack prior to that function async. If a function calls an async function that that function returns an async value and so does the one calling it and calling it and calling it ...

More info on javascript async and why can be found here.

Since the example provided doesn't have any async api's in there you don't need to do it async:

var condition = () =>
  (parseInt(Math.random() * 100) % 2)
    ? true
    : false

var delayIncrease =  (value) =>
  (condition())
    ? ++value
    : --value

var dataArr = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
// Start calling functions
dataArr.map(
  delayIncrease
)

[update]

When you mutate an array of objects and cosole.log it you may not see the values as they actually were when you log it but you see the values as they are right now (this is a "bug" in console.log).

Consider the following:

var i = -1,arr=[];
while(++i<1){
  arr[i]={};
  arr[i]["name"+i]=i
}

var process = (index) =>
  arr[index]["name"+index]++;

arr.forEach(
  (item,index) =>
    Promise.resolve(index)
    .then(process)
);
console.log("obj at the moment you are looking at it:",arr)
console.log("obj at the moment it is logged:",JSON.stringify(arr))

When you expand obj at the moment you are looking at it you see that name0 property of the first element changed to 1.

However; look at obj at the moment it is logged: and see the actual value of the first element in the array. It has name0 of 0.

You may think that the that code runs asynchronous functions in a synchronous way by mutating the object(s) in an array, but you actually experience a "bug" in console.log

3
  • Your code works perfectly, but codes of condition() is not accessible to me. It should always return Promise And also, I need to modify the original array. It is an array of objects(I made it plain to reduce code complexity in examples) Dec 7, 2017 at 11:34
  • @SujitKumarSingh so the contition function returns a promise? Then you can use the first example. I don't see a good reason to mutate an array (that is globally scoped in your example) in resolve handlers but I do see plenty of reasons not to do so.
    – HMR
    Dec 7, 2017 at 11:39
  • @SujitKumarSingh Updated my answer, I don't know why you think that mutating an array makes the functions synchronous but can think of one reason (in the answer). Please read the following (or at least watch the video link) to have some understanding of why promises are used and how they are used. stackoverflow.com/questions/47664598/…
    – HMR
    Dec 7, 2017 at 12:12

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.