@qwick/future v2.3.2-qwick.2
The Future is Now
Future is a Js.Promise alternative. It is written in ReasonML.
Compared to a promise, a future is:
- Lighter weight – Only ~25 lines of implementation.
- Simpler – Futures only resolve to a single type (as opposed to resolve and reject types), giving you more flexibility on your error handling.
- More robust – Futures have sound typing (unlike JS promises).
Installation
First make sure you have bs-platform >= 3.1.0. Then install with npm:
$ npm install --save reason-futureThen add "reason-future" to your bsconfig.json dev dependencies:
{
...
"bs-dependencies": [
"reason-future"
]
}Basic Usage
To create a task, use Future.make. It provides a single resolve function, like a promise with no reject:
let futureGreeting = Future.make(resolve => resolve("hi"));To get the value of a future, use Future.get:
let futureGreeting = Future.make(resolve => resolve("hi"));
futureGreeting->Future.get(x => Js.log("Got value: " ++ x));
/* Alternatively: */
Future.make(resolve => resolve("hi"))
->Future.get(x => Js.log("Got value: " ++ x));Future.get only retrieves the future value. If you want to transform it to a different value, then you should use Future.map:
/* Shortcut for: let future_A = Future.make(resolve => resolve(99)); */
let future_A = Future.value(99);
let future_B = future_A->Future.map(n => n + 1);
future_A->Future.get(n => Js.log(n)); /* logs: 99 */
future_B->Future.get(n => Js.log(n)); /* logs: 100 */And finally, if you map a future and return another future, you probably want to flatMap instead:
let futureNum = Future.value(50);
let ft_a = futureNum->Future.map(n => Future.value(n + 10));
let ft_b = futureNum->Future.flatMap(n => Future.value(n + 20));
/* ft_a has type future(future(int)) – probably not what you want. */
/* ft_b has type future(int) */API
Core functions. Note: _ represents the future itself as inserted by -> (the fast pipe operator).
Future.make(resolver)- Create a new, potentially-async future.Future.value(x)- Create a new future with a plain value (synchronous).Future.map(_,fn)- Transform a future value into another valueFuture.flatMap(_,fn)- Transform a future value into another future valueFuture.get(_,fn)- Get the value of a futureFuture.tap(_,fn)- Do something with the value of a future without changing it. Returns the same future so you can continue using it in a pipeline. Convenient for side effects such as console logging.Future.all(_,fn)- Turn a list of futures into a future of a list. Used when you want to wait for a collection of futures to complete before doing something (equivalent to Promise.all in Javascript).
Belt.Result
Convenience functions when working with a future Belt.Result. Note: _ represents the future itself as inserted by -> (the fast pipe operator).
Note 2: The terms Result.Ok and Result.Error in this context are expected to be read as Belt.Result.Ok and Belt.Result.Error.
Future.mapOk(_,fn)- Transform a future value into another value, but only if the value is anResult.Ok. Similar toPromise.prototype.thenFuture.mapError(_,fn)- Transform a future value into another value, but only if the value is anResult.Error. Similar toPromise.prototype.catchFuture.tapOk(_,fn)- Do something with the value of a future without changing it, but only if the value is aBelt.Result.Ok. Returns the same future. Convenience for side effects such as console logging.Future.tapError(_,fn)- Same astapOkbut forResult.Error
The following are more situational:
Future.flatMapOk(_, fn)- Transform a futureResult.Okinto a futureResult. Flattens the inner future.Future.flatMapError(_, fn)- Transform a futureResult.Errorinto a futureResult. Flattens the inner future.
FutureJs
Convenience functions for interop with JavaScript land.
FutureJs.fromPromise(promise, errorTransformer)promiseis theJs.Promise.t('a)that will be transformed into aFuture.t(Belt.Result.t('a, 'e))errorTransformerallows you to determine howJs.Promise.errorobjects will be transformed before they are returned wrapped within aBelt.Result.Error. This allows you to implement the error handling method which best meets your application's needs.
FutureJs.toPromise(future)futureis anyFuture.t('a)which is transformed into aJs.Promise.t('a). Always resolves, never rejects the promise.
FutureJs.resultToPromise(future)futureis theFuture.t(Belt.Result('a, 'e))which is transformed into aJs.Promise.t('a). Resolves the promise on Ok result and rejects on Error result.
Example use:
/*
This error handler is super simple; you will probably want
to write something more sophisticated in your app.
*/
let handleError = Js.String.make;
somePromiseGetter()
->FutureJs.fromPromise(handleError)
->Future.map(value => Js.log2("It worked!", value))
->Future.mapError(err => Js.log2("uh on", err));See Composible Error Handling in OCaml for several strategies that you may employ.
TODO
- Implement cancellation tokens
- Interop with
Js.Promise flatMapOk/flatMapError(with composable error handling)
Build
npm run buildBuild + Watch
npm run startTest
npm testEditor
If you use vscode, Press Windows + Shift + B it will build automatically