Writing cleaner asynchronous code using promises
Promises are an alternative pattern to callbacks for writing asynchronous code. A promise represents an operation that hasn't completed yet but is expected to do so in the future. As the name promise suggests, a promise is a contract to eventually provide a value or a reason for failure (that is, an error). You may already be familiar with this pattern from Tasks in .NET or Futures in Java. A promise has three possible states:
- pending represents an in-progress operation
- fulfilled representing a successful operation, with a result value
- rejected representing an unsuccessful operation, with a failure reason
When executing a single operation, the callback-based and promise-based approaches appear quite ...
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