take-oath v1.3.4
take-oath
"Promisify" that works
Requirements
- ES6 (Node >= 6)
Installation
npm i take-oathExamples
Promisify a module
const takeOath = require('take-oath')
const {readdir} = takeOath('fs')
readdir('/path/to/directory').then(console.log)The module can be a function or an object. take-oath is immutable in nature
and will not modify the original module in any way.
Promisify a function
const takeOath = require('take-oath')
const inc = (number, callback) => {
callback(null, number + 1)
}
takeOath(inc)(2).then(console.log) // 3You can also bind the function to a context...
const takeOath = require('take-oath')
const obj = {number: 1}
const inc = function (callback) {
callback(null, this.number + 1)
}
takeOath(inc, obj)().then(console.log) // 2Promisify an array of functions
const promisify = require('take-oath')
const [fn1, fn2] = promisify([
cb => cb(null, 'foo'),
cb => cb(null, 'bar')
])
fn1().then(console.log) // fooPromisify all functions in an Object
const takeOath = require('take-oath')
const obj = {
fn1: cb => cb(null, 'foo'),
fn2: cb => cb(new Error('bar'))
}
takeOath(obj).fn1().then(console.log) // foo
takeOath(obj).fn2().catch(console.error) // Error: barNote: take-oath is immutable in nature and will not modify the original
object.
Custom promisify function
Node < 8
const promisify = require('take-oath')
const inc = promisify((number, callback) => {
callback(number + 1)
}, null, {
promisifyFunction: () => number =>
new Promise(resolve => resolve(number + 1))
})
inc(2).then(console.log) // 3Node >= 8
const promisify = require('take-oath')
const util = require('util')
const inc = (number, callback) => {
callback(null, number + 1)
}
inc[util.promisify.custom] = number =>
new Promise(resolve => resolve(number + 1))
promisify(inc)(2).then(console.log) // 3Cookbook
Separating callback and promise methods
take-oath is fairly light weight and doesn't use any complex decisions on
whether the function should or should not be promisified. It is also immutable
by nature and will not modify the object. Therefore we recommend separating the
callback and promise style methods. Here's an example:
When using the nedb module to construct a datastore we have several callback
style functions on the datastore instance. However, when you don't pass the
callback it will return a chainable query instance. We'll need this to construct
more complex queries, but we may also want simple promise style methods for
simpler calls.
// db.js
const promisify = require('take-oath')
const Datastore = require('nedb')
const db = new Datastore('./data.db')
db.promise = promisify(db)
module.exports = dbWe've now got a datastore object as a module ./db.js. The instance has both
the usual callback style methods and promise methods available on the promise
object.
const db = require('./db')
const promisify = require('take-oath')
exports.getLatest = schemaVersion => {
const query = db.findOne({schema: schemaVersion}).sort({insertedAt: -1})
return promisify(query.exec, query)
}
exports.getAll = () => db.promise.findAll()Now the above module can use the datastore in either way when appropriate.