A polyfill for native ES6 Promises as close as possible (no extensions) to the strict spec definitions.
The aim of this project is to be the smallest polyfill for Promises, staying as close as possible to what's specified in both Promises/A+ and the upcoming ES6 specification.
An equally important goal is to avoid exposing any capability for promise-state to be mutated externally. The Known Limitations section below explains the trade-offs of that balance.
To use this polyfill in the browser, include the "npo.js" file (see the instructions in Tests/Compliance section below for how to build "npo.js" if you don't have it already) with your site's scripts. It's a polyfill, which means it will not overwrite Promise
if it exists as a global already, so it's safe to include unconditionally.
To use with AMD, import the "npo.js" file module.
To install the polyfill via bower, run:
bower install native-promise-only
To install the polyfill via npm, run:
npm install native-promise-only
Then require the module into your node code:
require("native-promise-only");
Notice that using the module in this way, we don't assign the module's public API to any variable. We don't need to, because it's a polyfill that intentionally patches the global environment (in this case to the Promise
name) once included.
If you want to also have a reference pointing to the same Promise
global, you can also assign the return value from the require(..)
statement, but it's strongly recommended that you use the same Promise
name so as to not create confusion:
var Promise = require("native-promise-only");
// Promise === global.Promise; // true!
Other than the below Known Limitations discussion and some browser bugs (such as these) which this polyfill doesn't suffer from, your promises should operate the same in all JS environments.
Exactly like native promises, here's a quick example of how you create and use the polyfilled promises:
var p = new Promise(function(resolve,reject){
setTimeout(function(){
resolve("Yay!");
},100);
});
p.then(function(msg){
console.log(msg); // Yay!
});
For more on promises, check these blog posts out:
- Back-story on the hows and whys behind promises (chaining, errors, etc): multi-part blog post series "Promises" by getify (me).
- Using and enjoying native promises: JavaScript Promises by Jake Archibald.
A promise object from this polyfill will be an instance of the Promise
constructor, which makes identification of genuine promises easier:
var p = new Promise(..);
p instanceof Promise; // true
However, these promise instances don't inherit (delegate to) a meaningful Promise.prototype
object for their methods (there is one, it's just mostly empty).
Consider:
var p = new Promise(..);
Object.getOwnPropertyNames( p ); // [ then, catch ]
Object.getOwnPropertyNames( Promise.prototype ); // [ constructor ]
As such, these promises are not really "sub-classable" in the ES6 class
/ extends
sense, though theoretically you should be able to do that in ES6 with the built-in Promises.
To read a full explanation of why, read Part 3: The Trust Problem of my blog post series on Promises.
Briefly, the reason for this deviation is that there's a choice between having delegated methods on the .prototype
or having private state. Since the spirit of promises was always to ensure trustability -- that promises were immutable (from the outside) to everyone except the initial resolver/deferred -- private state is a critically important feature to preserve.
Many other ES6 promise shims/libs seem to have forgotten that important point, as many of them either expose the state publicly on the object instance or provide public accessor methods which can externally mutate a promise's state. Both of these deviations are intolerable in my opinion, so this library chose the opposite trade-off: no ES6 sub-classing.
Any trade-off is a shame, but this one is the least of a few evils, and probably won't prove to limit very many, as there are only a limited number of use-cases for extend
ing Promise
in the ES6 sub-class sense.
This project intentionally adheres pretty strictly to the narrow core of Promises/A+ as adopted/implemented by ES6 into the native Promise()
mechanism.
But it's quite likely that you will experience a variety of scenarios in which using only native promises might be tedious, limiting, or more trouble than it's worth. There's good reason why most other Promises/A+ "compliant" libs are actually superset extensions on the narrow core: because async flow-control is often quite complex in the real world.
Native Promise Only will NOT add any of these extra flourishes. Sorry.
However, I have another project: asynquence (async + sequence). It's an abstraction on top of the promises concept (promises are hidden inside), designed to drastically improve the readability and expressiveness of your async flow-control code.
You simply express your async flow-control and asynquence creates and chains all the promises for you underneath. Super simple.
asynquence has a custom implementation for the internal "promises" it uses, and as such does not need native Promises
, nor does it need/include this polyfill.
Get your feet wet with native promises first, but then when you go looking for something more, consider asynquence (which is vastly more powerful and is still only ~2k!).
Native Promise Only is "spec compliant" in the sense of passing all tests in the Promises/A+ Test Suite.
To run all tests:
- Either git-clone this repo or run
npm install native-promise-only
, and then switch into that project root. - Run
npm install
in the project root to install the dev-dependencies. - If you didn't get native-promise-only from npm, then from the project root, run
./build.js
ornode build.js
ornpm run build
to generate the minified "npo.js" in the project root. - Finally, run
npm test
.
Note: Other tests need to be added, such as testing the Promise()
constructor's behavior, as well as the Promise.*
static helpers (resolve(..)
, reject(..)
, all(..)
, and race(..)
), none of which are covered by the Promises/A+ test suite.
Developing a more comprehensive test-suite to augment the Promises/A+ test suite is now another primary goal of this project.
The code and all the documentation are released under the MIT license.