# D.js
## This project won't be maintained anymore
> It was fun to create D.js at the time it was made, but there's no mean for such a library nowadays. Promises are first citizens in javascript since a long time now and Internet explorer is dead. So I won't invest more time in this library anymore. It will stay there for people that want to look at it or cross this lib in an old project and need documentation to understand the lib.
D.js is a tiny implementation of promises/A+ made for nodejs and client-side browser (tested in ie7+, firefox and chrome)
If you want to know more about promises/A+ you can visit this page: http://promises-aplus.github.io/promises-spec/
<a href="http://promises-aplus.github.com/promises-spec">
<img src="https://promisesaplus.com/assets/logo-small.png"
alt="Promises/A+ logo" title="Promises/A+ 1.0 compliant" align="right" />
</a>
[![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/malko/D.js.png?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/malko/D.js)
[![Codacy Badge](https://www.codacy.com/project/badge/7940707cc94b4a919eaa75b5054b63f4)](https://www.codacy.com/public/malko/D.js.git)
## installation
### nodejs
```npm install d.js```
### browsers
Now D.js is installable through _bower_:
```bower install D.js```
You still can clone the repository or simply copy the file lib/D[.min].js to your server and then include it in your pages with a classic
```
<script src="D.js"></script>
<!-- or via rawgit cdn -->
<script src="https://cdn.rawgit.com/malko/D.js/v0.7.5/lib/D.min.js"></script>
```
or using a javascript loader like _[l.js](https://github.com/malko/l.js)_.
D.js is now also compatible with amd loaders such as _require.js_ or _almond_
## Making an async method that return a promise:
example in node js wrapping the fs.readFile function to work with promise
```javascript
var fs = require('fs')
, D = require('d.js')
;
// define a method that will return a promise of a file read content
function readPromise(filename){
var deferred = D();
fs.readFile(filename, function (err, data) {
if( err ){
deferred.reject(err);
} else {
deferred.resolve(data);
}
};
return deferred.promise;
}
// use our readPromise method we don't pass in a callback, we will pass it to the then method
readPromise('/etc/passwd')
.then( // the then method return a promise as well so we can chain then calls
function(data){ console.log(data); }
,function(err){ console.log(err); }
)
;
```
## Addition to the Promises/A+ specs
D.js offers a little more than the promises/A+ specification requirements. Here's the api:
### Promises methods
In addition to the unique **then** method required by the specifications, D.js supports the following methods for each promise:
```javascript
promise.isPending() // return false if the promise is fulfilled or rejected, true otherwise
promise.getStatus() // return -1 if rejected, 0 is pending and 1 if fulfilled
promise.success(onFulfilled); // same as promise.then(onFulfilled);
promise.error(onRejected); // same as promise.then(undefined,onRejected);
promise.otherwise(onRejected); // alias of promise.error();
promise.apply(onFulfilled,onRejected); // same as then but when received an array as promise resolution value will pass each array entry as single parameter of the onFulfill callback
promise.spread(onFulfilled,onRejected); // alias of apply
promise.ensure(onRejected); // cleanup method which will be always executed regardless fulfillment or rejection
promise.nodify(nodeStyleCallback); // take a single callback which wait for an error as first parameter. other resolution values are passed as with the apply/spread method
promise.rethrow(onRejected) // helper for onRejected method that rethrow the reason of the rejection
promise.rethrow() // see below for more info on rethrow behaviour
```
#### promise.apply / promise.spread:
The **apply** method is a minor variation of the **then** method especially useful for promises of Array. Instead of passing an Array as the first parameter of onFulfulled, it will pass each element of the Array as a different parameter. Here is an example:
```javascript
var arrayPromise = D.resolved([1,2,3]); // we'll talk about resolved later
arrayPromise.then(function(a){ /* a will contains the whole array */ })
arrayPromise.apply(function(a,b,c){ /* a will be 1, b is 2 and c is 3 */ }
```
#### promise.ensure
The **ensure** method will return the same promise untouched. It is used for cleanup tasks and the given callback will be called regardless of the promise fulfillment or rejection.
It won't receive any parameter and the returned value won't serve to fulfill a new promise.
#### promise.nodify
The **nodify** method is the counterpart of the **D.nodeCapsule** method. it take a single node style callback as parameter which wait for an Error as first parameter if any.
If the promise is fulfilled then the first parameter will be undefined and other promises values will be applied as with the **promise.apply** method.
If the promise is rejected then the first parameter will be the reason of the rejection and other parameters will be ommited.
```javascript
promise.nodify(function(err, arg1, arg2, arg3){
if(err){
// promise is rejected treat the error or rethrow it
} else {
// promise is fulfilled do some work with other arguments
}
});
```
#### promise.rethrow
The **rethrow** method serves two different purposes
- When it receives an onRejected method, it will ensure that onRejected rethrows the error. Here's an exemple of the same behaviour without using rethrow
```javascript
var onRejectedResolve = function(reason){
console.error(reason);
return 'resolvedvalue';
}
// first example the error is resolved
promise
.error(onRejectedResolve)
.success(function(a){
/* a now contains 'resolvedvalue' */
})
;
// second example we want the same errorHandler but we don't want to resolve
promise
.error(function(reason){
onRejectedResolve(reason);
throw reason;
})
.success(function(a){
/* this success will never get called */
})
;
// third example using the same errorHandler and rethrow.
// This does exactly the same thing as second example
promise
.rethrow(onRejectedResolve)
.success(function(a){
/* this success will never get called */
})
;
```
- If no onRejected callback is given, it will behave differently. When you use a Promises/A+ library no Error is thrown outside of your promise library so it's sometimes difficult to debug. For this purpose you can use the **rethrow** method that will really re-throw the error outside of the promise library. this is really useful for debugging but also to end your promise chain when you want an error to be effectively thrown.
```javascript
promise
.success(function(){
throw "there's no good reason";
})
.error(function(reason){
console.error(reason);
throw reason;
/*
even throwing again the reason won't make the reason visible outside the promise library
the error will go to the next error handler or simply be ignored if no error handler exists
*/
})
// rethrow call WITHOUT ANY PARAMATER will rejectet the reason in the outside world and you will see an uncaught error
.rethrow()
;
```
## D properties and methods
#### D() or D.defer()
return a __deferred__ object with **promise** as a property and **resolve**, **fulfill** (alias of resolve), **reject** as methods
#### D.alwaysAsync = true
setting this to false will broke the compliance to the Promises/A+ specification but will try to resolve promise immediatly if the value is available instead of forcing an async resolution this is not a recommended behaviour but it may be useful in some cases
#### D.onlyFuncs = true
This setting passed to false will also break compliance with the Promises/A+ specification by allowing then, success, error, apply and rethrow to received values instead of callbacks for onFulfilled or onRejected and will resolve the promise with thoose values.
#### D.resolved(value), D.fulfilled(value), D.resolve(value)
return a resolved promise of __value__
#### D.rejected(reason), D.reject(reason)
return a rejected promise with given __reason__
#### D.wait(time)
return a promise that will resolve in __time__ ms
#### D.delay(fn,delay)
return a promise for the return value of __fn__ which will be resolved in __delay__ ms (if fn is not a function it will be used as the resolved value)
#### D.promisify(value)
internal method exposed that will return a resolved promised of value if value isn't a promise
#### D.all(listOfPromise), D.all(promise0,promise1,promise....)
take a list of promise as single Array or as list or parameters and return a promise that will resolved only when all given promised are resolved. the promise will received given promises values as parameters
#### D.resolveAll(listOfPromise), D.resolveAll(promise0,promise1,promise....)
take a list of promise as single Array or as list or parameters and return an always fulfilled promise of array<promise> list of promises/values regardless of their fulfilled or rejected resolution.
#### D.sequence(listOfFunction), D.sequence(fn0,fn1,fn....)
take a list of function to execute in order passing results of one to the other and return a promised of the last returned value. will be rejected if any of the function throw an error. as a convenience, it can also receive promises or direct values instead of functions in which case they will be considered as returned value
#### D.nodeCapsule(fn), D.nodeCapsule(subject,fn)
encapsulate typical node methods that wait for a callback(Err,param1,param2...) as last parameters and return the wrapped method which will return a promise of response usable with then, succes, ...
ie:
```javascript
var fs = require('fs')
, D = require('d.js')
, readFile = D.nodeCapsule(fs,fs.readFile)
;
readFile('/etc/passwd')
.success(function(data){ console.log(data); })
.rethrow()
;
```
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