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javascript - Why does the Promise constructor need an executor?

When using Promises, why can't triggers for resolve and reject be defined elsewhere in the codebase?

I don't understand why resolve and reject logic should be localized where the promise is declared. Is this an oversight, or is there a benefit to mandating the executor parameter?


I believe the executor function should be optional, and that its existence should determine whether the promise encapsulates resolution or not. The promise would be much more extensible without such mandates, since you don't have to initiate async right away. The promise should also be resettable. It's a 1 shot switch, 1 or 0, resolve() or reject(). There are a multitude of parallel and sequential outcomes that can be attached: promise.then(parallel1) and promise.then(parallel2) and also promise.then(seq1).then(seq2) but reference-privileged players cannot resolve/reject INTO the switch

You can construct a tree of outcomes at a later time, but you can't alter them, nor can you alter the roots (input triggers)

Honestly, the tree of sequential outcomes should be edittable as well.. say you want to splice out one step and do something else instead, after you've declared many promise chains. It doesn't make sense to reconstruct the promise and every sequential function, especially since you can't even reject or destroy the promise either...

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This is called the revealing constructor pattern coined by Domenic.

Basically, the idea is to give you access to parts of an object while that object is not fully constructed yet. Quoting Domenic:

I call this the revealing constructor pattern because the Promise constructor is revealing its internal capabilities, but only to the code that constructs the promise in question. The ability to resolve or reject the promise is only revealed to the constructing code, and is crucially not revealed to anyone using the promise. So if we hand off p to another consumer, say

The past

Initially, promises worked with deferred objects, this is true in the Twisted promises JavaScript promises originated in. This is still true (but often deprecated) in older implementations like Angular's $q, Q, jQuery and old versions of bluebird.

The API went something like:

var d = Deferred();
d.resolve(); 
d.reject();
d.promise; // the actual promise

It worked, but it had a problem. Deferreds and the promise constructor are typically used for converting non-promise APIs to promises. There is a "famous" problem in JavaScript called Zalgo - basically, it means that an API must be synchronous or asynchronous but never both at once.

The thing is - with deferreds it's possible to do something like:

function request(param) {
   var d = Deferred();
   var options = JSON.parse(param);
   d.ajax(function(err, value) { 
      if(err) d.reject(err);
      else d.resolve(value);
   });
}

There is a hidden subtle bug here - if param is not a valid JSON this function throws synchronously, meaning that I have to wrap every promise returning function in both a } catch (e) { and a .catch(e => to catch all errors.

The promise constructor catches such exceptions and converts them to rejections which means you never have to worry about synchronous exceptions vs asynchronous ones with promises. (It guards you on the other side by always executing then callbacks "in the next tick").

In addition, it also required an extra type every developer has to learn about where the promise constructor does not which is pretty nice.


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