Asynchronous Programming

"Synchronous basically means that you can only execute one thing at a time. Asynchronous means that you can execute multiple things at a time and you don't have to finish executing the current thing in order to move on to next one."


"The Internet", "The Web", "Web Apps". All of these terms describe something that is interconnected. If you zoom out a bit, the entire internet is basically billions of computers all sharing information and software! But so far your projects have been all alone on your computer :(

Everything you have learned so far happens on the callstack, everything on the callstack executes synchronously. Synchronous means that each line of code will finish executing before the next one starts. Think of infinite loops, your browser freezes because nothing else can happen while the loop is looping!

What makes web development so cool is the ... web. Being able to build applications that connect computers form across the internet. This also introduces some challenges, it can take some time for computers to talk to each other across the internet. You don't want your apps freezing while you wait to hear back from another computer.

Enter asynchronous programming: writing code that tells your browser to start one task and move on to a new task while you wait for the first to finish. This is possible because of the Event Loop.

Learning Objectives

  • 🥚 You understand the JavaScript Event Loop, and can demonstrate this by using setTimeout and setInterval to schedule simple tasks.
  • 🥚 You can explain why Asynchronous Programming is important for programs that have blocking and non-blocking tasks.
  • 🥚 You can explain the basics of the Client/Server model and HTTP requests and can fetch data from RESTful APIs.
  • 🐣 You can break down an asynchronous problem into smaller tasks and solve it using promises. This includes identify which tasks depend on each other and which are independent:
    • dependent tasks: The return value from one task is required to start the next task, these must be completed in a specific order - .then
    • independent tasks: These tasks do not use each other's return values, they can be completed at the same time - Promise.allsystem.
  • 🐣 You can fetch data from an API and render it into the DOM using /api-calls, /handlers and async/await syntax.
  • 🐣 You can write unit tests for functions that return promises using async/await syntax.

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Setting Up

How to study the code in this repo.

You will need NPM and nvm on your computer to study this material

Using a browser with good DevTools will make your life easier: Chromium, FireFox, Edge, Chrome

  1. Install or update the study-lenses package globally
    • npm install -g study-lenses (if you do not have it already)
    • npm update -g study-lenses (if you already have it installed)
  2. Clone this repository:
    • git clone git@github.com:HackYourFutureBelgium/asynchronous-programming.git (SSH) (recommended)
    • git clone https://github.com/HackYourFutureBelgium/asynchronous-programming.git (HTTPS)
    • gh repo clone HackYourFutureBelgium/asynchronous-programming (GH CLI)
  3. cd into the repository
    • cd asynchronous-programming
  4. Run the study command from your CLI
    • study
  5. The material will open in your default browser, you're good to go!

If you have a windows computer and get this error:

  • ... /study.ps1 cannot be loaded because running scripts ...

follow the instructions in this StackOverflow answer, that should take care of it ; )

Running Tests

You can also run tests directly from CLI using the NPM script:

  • npm run test -- ./path/to/file.js

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