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javascript - How do I use Bluebird with Angular?

I tried using Angular with Bluebird promises:

HTML:

<body ng-app="HelloApp">
    <div ng-controller="HomeController">{{name}} {{also}}</div>
</body>

JS:

// javascript
var app = angular.module('HelloApp', []);

app.controller("HomeController", function ($scope) {
    var p = Promise.delay(1000).then(function () {
        $scope.name = "Bluebird!";
        console.log("Here!", $scope.name);
    }).then(function () {
        $scope.also = "Promises";
    });
    $scope.name = "$q";
    $scope.also = "promises";
});

window.app = app;

[Fiddle]

However, no matter what I tried, it kept staying "$q promises" and did not update. Except if I added a manual $scope.$apply which I'd rather avoid.

How do I get Bluebird to work with AngularJS?

(I know it's possible since $q does it)

I'm using Bluebird 2.0 which I got here.

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1 Answer

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This is possible, and even quite easy!

Well, if we look at how Angular's own promises work, we need to get Bluebird to $evalAsync somewhere in order to get the exact same behavior.

If we do that, the fact both implementations are Promises/A+ compliant means we can interop between $q code and Bluebird code, meaning we can use all of Bluebird's features in Angular code freely.

Bluebird exposes this functionality, with its Promise.setScheduler functionality:

// after this, all promises will cause digests like $q promises.
function trackDigests(app) {
    app.run(["$rootScope",function ($rootScope) {
        Promise.setScheduler(function (cb) {
            $rootScope.$evalAsync(cb);
        });
    }]);
}

Now all we have to do is add a:

trackDigests(app); 

line after the var app = ... line, and everything will work as expected. For bonus points, put Bluebird in a service so you can inject it rather than use it on the global namespace.

Here is a [Fiddle] illustrating this behavior.

Note that besides all the features Bluebird has over $q, one of the more important ones is that Bluebird will not run $exceptionHandler, but instead will automatically track unhandled rejections, so you can throw freely with Bluebird promises and Bluebird will figure them out. Moreover calling Promise.longStackTraces() can help with debugging a lot.


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