tt-rss/lib/dojo/_base/Deferred.js

342 lines
12 KiB
JavaScript

/*
Copyright (c) 2004-2010, The Dojo Foundation All Rights Reserved.
Available via Academic Free License >= 2.1 OR the modified BSD license.
see: http://dojotoolkit.org/license for details
*/
if(!dojo._hasResource["dojo._base.Deferred"]){ //_hasResource checks added by build. Do not use _hasResource directly in your code.
dojo._hasResource["dojo._base.Deferred"] = true;
dojo.provide("dojo._base.Deferred");
dojo.require("dojo._base.lang");
(function(){
var mutator = function(){};
var freeze = Object.freeze || function(){};
// A deferred provides an API for creating and resolving a promise.
dojo.Deferred = function(/*Function?*/canceller){
// summary:
// Deferreds provide a generic means for encapsulating an asynchronous
// operation and notifying users of the completion and result of the operation.
// description:
// The dojo.Deferred API is based on the concept of promises that provide a
// generic interface into the eventual completion of an asynchronous action.
// The motivation for promises fundamentally is about creating a
// separation of concerns that allows one to achieve the same type of
// call patterns and logical data flow in asynchronous code as can be
// achieved in synchronous code. Promises allows one
// to be able to call a function purely with arguments needed for
// execution, without conflating the call with concerns of whether it is
// sync or async. One shouldn't need to alter a call's arguments if the
// implementation switches from sync to async (or vice versa). By having
// async functions return promises, the concerns of making the call are
// separated from the concerns of asynchronous interaction (which are
// handled by the promise).
//
// The dojo.Deferred is a type of promise that provides methods for fulfilling the
// promise with a successful result or an error. The most important method for
// working with Dojo's promises is the then() method, which follows the
// CommonJS proposed promise API. An example of using a Dojo promise:
//
// | var resultingPromise = someAsyncOperation.then(function(result){
// | ... handle result ...
// | },
// | function(error){
// | ... handle error ...
// | });
//
// The .then() call returns a new promise that represents the result of the
// execution of the callback. The callbacks will never affect the original promises value.
//
// The dojo.Deferred instances also provide the following functions for backwards compatibility:
//
// * addCallback(handler)
// * addErrback(handler)
// * callback(result)
// * errback(result)
//
// Callbacks are allowed to return promisesthemselves, so
// you can build complicated sequences of events with ease.
//
// The creator of the Deferred may specify a canceller. The canceller
// is a function that will be called if Deferred.cancel is called
// before the Deferred fires. You can use this to implement clean
// aborting of an XMLHttpRequest, etc. Note that cancel will fire the
// deferred with a CancelledError (unless your canceller returns
// another kind of error), so the errbacks should be prepared to
// handle that error for cancellable Deferreds.
// example:
// | var deferred = new dojo.Deferred();
// | setTimeout(function(){ deferred.callback({success: true}); }, 1000);
// | return deferred;
// example:
// Deferred objects are often used when making code asynchronous. It
// may be easiest to write functions in a synchronous manner and then
// split code using a deferred to trigger a response to a long-lived
// operation. For example, instead of register a callback function to
// denote when a rendering operation completes, the function can
// simply return a deferred:
//
// | // callback style:
// | function renderLotsOfData(data, callback){
// | var success = false
// | try{
// | for(var x in data){
// | renderDataitem(data[x]);
// | }
// | success = true;
// | }catch(e){ }
// | if(callback){
// | callback(success);
// | }
// | }
//
// | // using callback style
// | renderLotsOfData(someDataObj, function(success){
// | // handles success or failure
// | if(!success){
// | promptUserToRecover();
// | }
// | });
// | // NOTE: no way to add another callback here!!
// example:
// Using a Deferred doesn't simplify the sending code any, but it
// provides a standard interface for callers and senders alike,
// providing both with a simple way to service multiple callbacks for
// an operation and freeing both sides from worrying about details
// such as "did this get called already?". With Deferreds, new
// callbacks can be added at any time.
//
// | // Deferred style:
// | function renderLotsOfData(data){
// | var d = new dojo.Deferred();
// | try{
// | for(var x in data){
// | renderDataitem(data[x]);
// | }
// | d.callback(true);
// | }catch(e){
// | d.errback(new Error("rendering failed"));
// | }
// | return d;
// | }
//
// | // using Deferred style
// | renderLotsOfData(someDataObj).then(null, function(){
// | promptUserToRecover();
// | });
// | // NOTE: addErrback and addCallback both return the Deferred
// | // again, so we could chain adding callbacks or save the
// | // deferred for later should we need to be notified again.
// example:
// In this example, renderLotsOfData is syncrhonous and so both
// versions are pretty artificial. Putting the data display on a
// timeout helps show why Deferreds rock:
//
// | // Deferred style and async func
// | function renderLotsOfData(data){
// | var d = new dojo.Deferred();
// | setTimeout(function(){
// | try{
// | for(var x in data){
// | renderDataitem(data[x]);
// | }
// | d.callback(true);
// | }catch(e){
// | d.errback(new Error("rendering failed"));
// | }
// | }, 100);
// | return d;
// | }
//
// | // using Deferred style
// | renderLotsOfData(someDataObj).then(null, function(){
// | promptUserToRecover();
// | });
//
// Note that the caller doesn't have to change his code at all to
// handle the asynchronous case.
var result, finished, isError, head, nextListener;
var promise = this.promise = {};
function complete(value){
if(finished){
throw new Error("This deferred has already been resolved");
}
result = value;
finished = true;
notify();
}
function notify(){
var mutated;
while(!mutated && nextListener){
var listener = nextListener;
nextListener = nextListener.next;
if(mutated = (listener.progress == mutator)){ // assignment and check
finished = false;
}
var func = (isError ? listener.error : listener.resolved);
if (func) {
try {
var newResult = func(result);
if (newResult && typeof newResult.then === "function") {
newResult.then(dojo.hitch(listener.deferred, "resolve"), dojo.hitch(listener.deferred, "reject"));
continue;
}
var unchanged = mutated && newResult === undefined;
listener.deferred[unchanged && isError ? "reject" : "resolve"](unchanged ? result : newResult);
}
catch (e) {
listener.deferred.reject(e);
}
}else {
if(isError){
listener.deferred.reject(result);
}else{
listener.deferred.resolve(result);
}
}
}
}
// calling resolve will resolve the promise
this.resolve = this.callback = function(value){
// summary:
// Fulfills the Deferred instance successfully with the provide value
this.fired = 0;
this.results = [value, null];
complete(value);
};
// calling error will indicate that the promise failed
this.reject = this.errback = function(error){
// summary:
// Fulfills the Deferred instance as an error with the provided error
isError = true;
this.fired = 1;
complete(error);
this.results = [null, error];
if(!error || error.log !== false){
(dojo.config.deferredOnError || function(x){ console.error(x); })(error);
}
};
// call progress to provide updates on the progress on the completion of the promise
this.progress = function(update){
// summary
// Send progress events to all listeners
var listener = nextListener;
while(listener){
var progress = listener.progress;
progress && progress(update);
listener = listener.next;
}
};
this.addCallbacks = function(/*Function?*/callback, /*Function?*/errback){
this.then(callback, errback, mutator);
return this;
};
// provide the implementation of the promise
this.then = promise.then = function(/*Function?*/resolvedCallback, /*Function?*/errorCallback, /*Function?*/progressCallback){
// summary
// Adds a fulfilledHandler, errorHandler, and progressHandler to be called for
// completion of a promise. The fulfilledHandler is called when the promise
// is fulfilled. The errorHandler is called when a promise fails. The
// progressHandler is called for progress events. All arguments are optional
// and non-function values are ignored. The progressHandler is not only an
// optional argument, but progress events are purely optional. Promise
// providers are not required to ever create progress events.
//
// This function will return a new promise that is fulfilled when the given
// fulfilledHandler or errorHandler callback is finished. This allows promise
// operations to be chained together. The value returned from the callback
// handler is the fulfillment value for the returned promise. If the callback
// throws an error, the returned promise will be moved to failed state.
//
// example:
// An example of using a CommonJS compliant promise:
// | asyncComputeTheAnswerToEverything().
// | then(addTwo).
// | then(printResult, onError);
// | >44
//
var returnDeferred = progressCallback == mutator ? this : new dojo.Deferred(promise.cancel);
var listener = {
resolved: resolvedCallback,
error: errorCallback,
progress: progressCallback,
deferred: returnDeferred
};
if(nextListener){
head = head.next = listener;
}
else{
nextListener = head = listener;
}
if(finished){
notify();
}
return returnDeferred.promise;
};
var deferred = this;
this.cancel = promise.cancel = function () {
// summary:
// Cancels the asynchronous operation
if(!finished){
var error = canceller && canceller(deferred);
if(!finished){
if (!(error instanceof Error)) {
error = new Error(error);
}
error.log = false;
deferred.reject(error);
}
}
}
freeze(promise);
};
dojo.extend(dojo.Deferred, {
addCallback: function (/*Function*/callback) {
return this.addCallbacks(dojo.hitch.apply(dojo, arguments));
},
addErrback: function (/*Function*/errback) {
return this.addCallbacks(null, dojo.hitch.apply(dojo, arguments));
},
addBoth: function (/*Function*/callback) {
var enclosed = dojo.hitch.apply(dojo, arguments);
return this.addCallbacks(enclosed, enclosed);
},
fired: -1
});
})();
dojo.when = function(promiseOrValue, /*Function?*/callback, /*Function?*/errback, /*Function?*/progressHandler){
// summary:
// This provides normalization between normal synchronous values and
// asynchronous promises, so you can interact with them in a common way
// example:
// | function printFirstAndList(items){
// | dojo.when(findFirst(items), console.log);
// | dojo.when(findLast(items), console.log);
// | }
// | function findFirst(items){
// | return dojo.when(items, function(items){
// | return items[0];
// | });
// | }
// | function findLast(items){
// | return dojo.when(items, function(items){
// | return items[items.length];
// | });
// | }
// And now all three of his functions can be used sync or async.
// | printFirstAndLast([1,2,3,4]) will work just as well as
// | printFirstAndLast(dojo.xhrGet(...));
if(promiseOrValue && typeof promiseOrValue.then === "function"){
return promiseOrValue.then(callback, errback, progressHandler);
}
return callback(promiseOrValue);
};
}