JS Async: async/await
Felipe Sousa
Posted on September 8, 2020
This post is the last of the JS Async series, 3 posts to explain and show how to work with asynchronous data in JavaScript.
You can check out the other 2 previous articles:
Today we’ll talk about async/await
and see some examples of how and what we can do with it:
Async
The keyword async was implemented in ES2017. It makes it possible to create naturally asynchronous functions using the following notation:
async function myAsyncFunction() {}
Something important and even more interesting about this implementation is that every async
function returns a Promise, meaning that we can use all the interfaces we already know in the article about promises. Let's look at an example to better understand:
async function myAsyncFunction() {
return "Hello!";
}
myAsyncFunction().then(payload => {
console.log(payload); // Hello!
});
The async
functions use the success values as the values that will be arranged within the.then
pipeline in the promise that will be returned, in case you need to export an error, it is necessary to trigger an error within the scope of execution to be sent to the .catch
pipeline, let's see an example:
async function myAsyncFunctionWithError() {
throw "something wrong happen";
}
myAsyncFunctionWithError().catch(error => {
console.log(error); // something wrong happen
});
Await
The use of await
is restricted only within a function declared with the keyword async, basically what it does is wait for the Promise response value or convert the value into a resolved Promise.
async function myAsyncFunction() {
const payload = await { name: "felipe", age: 22 };
console.log(payload); // { name: 'felipe', age: 22 }
}
myAsyncFunction();
In cases where we are not returning any value from our function, the execution call remains as normal function calls without using .then
.
Catching errors with try/catch
Await
always expects the success value of the promise, so we have no way to capture the error directly, to do this we have to make use of the try/catch
which receives the reject value if it happens, within the promises that are being executed inside the try
block:
async function myAsyncErrorFunction() {
throw "ops, something wrong happen";
}
async function myAsyncFunction() {
try {
const response = await myAsyncErrorFunction();
} catch (error) {
console.log(error); // ops, something wrong happen
}
}
myAsyncFunction();
Executing this block, the error happens inside the promise myAsyncErrorFunction
and is captured inside the try/catch catch
block.
In summary, the joint use of the implementations makes our code extremely simple and readable, making handling asynchronous (or synchronous) data more directly and effectively.
I hope you enjoyed this series, see you later!
🔭
Posted on September 8, 2020
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