2019-11-18
|~5 min read
|819 words
I often find myself looking up patterns for converting synchronous code into async variants in Javascript. Whether it’s remembering how exactly Promise chains work or what I need to do to create a Promise - there always seems to be one part that trips me up.
I wanted to document a simple, but I think representative, example of how to take a synchronous function and convert it to be asynchronous in Javascript.
I’ll be using a node function that is reading a file from the file system.
The original function is:
const findAssetSync = (name) => {
const assetPath = path.join(__dirname, "assets", name)
return fs.readFileSync(assetPath, { encoding: "utf-8" }).toString()
}
The first step is to make this function return a promise instead.1
const findAssetAsync = (name) => {
const assetPath = path.join(__dirname, "assets", name)
return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
fs.readFile(assetPath, { encoding: "utf-8" }, (err, data) => {
if (err) reject(err)
return resolve(data)
})
})
}
Now, let’s look at how this would actually be used. I’ll start with the synchronous version.2
const server = http.createServer((req, res) => {
const route = url.parse(req.url).pathname
if (routes[route]) {
const assets = findAssetSync(routes[route])
res.write(assets)
res.end()
} else {
res.writeHead(404, ‘Not Found’)
res.end()
}
})
To use the asynchronous version, however, we either need to convert the callback within createServer
into an Async/Await
function or now use a promise chain.
The point, however, is that now, instead of returning the string itself as we do in findAssetSync
, findAssetAsync
returns a promise.
Promise chains create some complexity. Because we want to to make sure we resolve before moving onto the writing of the server response - we can’t do this:
const server = http.createServer((req, res) => {
/* ... */
if (routes[route]) {
let assets = findAssetAsync(routes[route])
.then((results) => {
assets = results
})
.catch((err) => console.error(err))
res.write(assets)
res.end()
} else {
/* ... */
}
})
This would error, because while the promise is resolving, node would just continue moving along and reading the file — so we’d write assets (which would be undefined at the time) and then end the response.
To handle this - we place the response inside the .then
block:
const server = http.createServer((req, res) => {
/* ... */
if (routes[route]) {
findAssetAsync(routes[route])
.then((results) => {
res.write(results)
res.end()
})
.catch((err) => console.error(err))
} else {
/* ... */
}
})
It’s easy to see how, if this were to get much more complicated - and/or you wanted to carry variables forward (instead of just using the “response” variable from a Promise) how this can quickly get messy.3
The async await syntax is much simpler to reason through. While it’s not creating synchronous code - it reads as if it is. And underneath, it’s all just using Promises.
const server = http.createServer(async (req, res) => {
/* ... */
if (routes[route]) {
const assets = await findAssetAsync(routes[route])
res.write(assets)
/* ... */
} else {
/* ... */
}
})
That’s it. We’re now waiting for the Async function to resolve before preceeding - all while not blocking other requests.
Converting from synchronous to asynchronous javascript code is not particularly difficult. It’s a matter of understanding what is actually happening with the event loop and then pattern recognition.
Async functions return a promise. As a result, they’re chain-able.
While most of the time, we simply await for the async function to resolve and assign the results to a variable, what about if there’s an error? The most common way to handle error handling with Async/Await is a try/catch block.
const server = http.createServer(async (req, res) => {
/* … */
try {
if (routes[route]) {
const assets = await findAssetAsync(routes[route])
res.write(assets)
/* … */
} else {
/* … */
}
} catch (error) {
throw new Error(error)
}
})
This is not that dissimilar to a single catch in a large chain of promises.
But what if we want a little more fine control? We could have multiple try/catch blocks. Or, we could use a .catch:
const server = http.createServer(async (req, res) => {
/* … */
if (routes[route]) {
const assets = await findAssetAsync(routes[route]).catch((error) => {
throw new Error(error)
})
res.write(assets)
/* … */
} else {
/* … */
}
})
I’ve historically used the try/catch, but having learned about this new approach, I imagine I’ll be adopting it much more going forward!
routes
object that I’m looking for the route
.Hi there and thanks for reading! My name's Stephen. I live in Chicago with my wife, Kate, and dog, Finn. Want more? See about and get in touch!