Here a sample code:
function getExtendedPromise() {
const promise = new Promise((resolve) => {
setTimeout(() => {
resolve('Hi');
}, 1000)
});
promise.on = () => {
console.log('on listener called')
};
console.log('getExtendedPromise: ', promise);
return promise;
}
async function callExtendedPromise() {
await Promise.resolve();
return Promise.resolve(getExtendedPromise())
}
const promise = callExtendedPromise();
console.log('callExtendedPromise Try: ', promise);
callExtendedPromise().then((result) => {
console.log('Final Result: ', result)
});
Log Results:
callExtendedPromise Try: Promise { <pending> }
getExtendedPromise: Promise { <pending>, on: [Function] }
getExtendedPromise: Promise { <pending>, on: [Function] }
Final Result: Hi
As seen from the sample above, when the object is logged inside the getExtendedPromise() function, it has an on
property. I then wrap it in a Promise.resolve
, and return it to the caller because I want the caller to get the Promise
object with the on
property.
However, when calling callExtendedPromise()
, I am not able to access that wrapped promise with the on
property.
How can I get that promise instance with the on
property?
getExtendedPromise()
is the part of a library and not open for modification.
P.S. the choice of the structure of the extended promise is not my choice in the original code, but rather the structure returned from a library.
getExtendedPromise()
is the part of a library and not open for modification..on()
from the codebase.