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Due

NPM

A simpler alternative to Promises in Javascript. It doesn't follow the Promise/A+ specification. Instead, it follows the error-first convention from Node.js.

What is a due ?

A due is like a promise, but with a simpler interface. If you are familiar with callback and promise, you can skip the next paragraph.

Javascript is a functional language, functions are first class citizen. It is possible to return, and take function as arguments. A callback is a function whose execution is to be deferred, for example to iterate over an array. This make Javascript a language of choice for asynchronous execution model, like DOM and node.js. In these execution models, asynchronous sequences of execution are linked by callbacks.

my_fn('input', function callback(err, res) {
  // deferred execution
})

Because callbacks are passed as arguments, it might lead to an intricate imbrication of calls and callbacks. It is called the callback hell, or pyramid of doom. The source code structure is not linear, but imbricated.

my_fn('input', function callback(err, res) {
  another_fn('another_input', function callback2() {
    // deferred execution
  })
})

Some tools and practices exist to arrange deferred execution linearly, for example Promise/A+, or Functional Reactive Programming. Due is similar to Promise, but with a simpler interface.

A due is an object returned by an asynchronous call. This object exposes a method then, to continue the execution, once the asynchronous call complete.

my_fn('input')
.then(function(err, res) {
  // deferred execution
})

A due, like a promise, flatten the intricate imbrication of callbacks.

my_fn('input')
.then(function(err, res) {
  return another_fn('another_input')
})
.then(function(err, res) {
  // second execution
})

How to use a due ?

Patch an existing library to be due-compatible

The due npm module expose a function mock make asynchronous function using callback, return a due.

var Due = require('../src'),
    fs = require('fs');

readdir = Due.mock(fs.readdir)
// ...

readdir(path)
.then(function(err, files) {
  // ... deferred execution
})

Create your own due-compatible library

A simple due-compatible library :

my_lib.js

var D = require('due');

module.exports = {
  my_fn: function(input) {
    // The due is returned to be handled by the client.
    return new D(function(settle) {
        // Here, your asynchronous operations, with settle as callback.
        async_fn(input, settle);
    })
  } 
}

client.js

var my_lib = require('./my_lib');

my_lib.my_fn('input')
.then(function(err, result) {
  console.log(result);
})