This is a toy implementation of the Promises/A+ specs for learning and fun.
Why?
why not?
How to use it
It behaves as an ES6 Promise.
const p = new P((resolve, reject) => {
setTimeout(() => {
resolve(123);
}, 100);
});
p.then(val => console.log(val)); // 123
p.then(val => {
console.log(val); // 123
return 1;
})
.then(val => console.log(val)); // 1
It's interoperable with an ES6 promise and most of the other promise like objects.
const p = new P((resolve, reject) => {
setTimeout(() => {
resolve(new Promise((resolve, reject) => resolve(123)));
}, 100);
});
p.then(val => console.log(val)); // 123