note: all concepts are connected so to know one thing you need to understand other concepts as well
lets suppose you have loop in your program that takes years to complete. Now you Have two options either move on or wait. If you choose to wait then it will considered blocking code. If not then you dont have choice ?. lets seeeee.
//blocking code let sum = 0; for(let i = 1;i<Number.MAX_SAFE_INTEGER;i++){ for(let j = 1;j<Number.MAX_SAFE_INTEGER;j++){ sum = i+j; } } console.log(sum); // above program is dummy and does not serve any purpose
now as you can see for won't let run programs that are below it before it completes. Now sum to run we have to wait for years and user might miss out some important things(other functionalities).
To bypass such situations we can put for and console.log(sum) to some file that can run parallelly to our code and wait until we give it a green signal. This is called async. Async code run parallel to the main code and only runs after main code finishes.
If async code has another async code in it. It won't run until outer finishes.
what will be the output of the below program ?
// will inner ever run ? if yes then why (ask gemini/gpt) setInterval(()=>{ console.log("outer"); setInterval(()=>{ console.log("inner"); },1000) },1000)
setTimeout(()=>{ console.log("outer"); setTimeout(()=>{ console.log("inner"); for(let i = 1;i<1000;i++){} console.log("inner finished"); },0) console.log("outer finishes"); },0) console.log("i will run first");
output
i will run first outer outer finishes inner inner finished
note:From above code you can device that outer block now act as a main code while as inner as async code.
you see even console.log("i will run first") written after main code it runs first. How ? this is called non-blocking or async code. It does not hinder main functionality of your program. Let you do time taking operations in your application such as writing and reading.
await keyword always wrapped in async function and won't let other code below it executive until it finishes. Async and await are key-pair. One more thing, await always placed before functions that return promises and always always wrapped it in try catch block.
async function myPromise(){ try{ await doSomething(); // a function that return promise console.log("Your file is successfully created"); //only runs when promise is accepted } catch(err){ console.log(err); // if promised is rejected; } } myPromise(); console.log("first");
output
# consider promise to be successful first Your file is successfully created
Understanding till now (conclusion):
do you find something common in all use cases?
yes all application takes time to execute.
Promise gives us superpower to handle such situation adequately. Again Promises and async-await goes hand by hand.
A async keyword outside a function that returns promise is purely optional. See below code...
fetchData
// trying to mimic as a server response function fetchData(success=false){ return new Promise((resolve,reject)=>{ if(success){ setTimeout(()=>{ resolve("fetched successfully"); },5000) // execute after 5 sec } else reject("server is not responding"); }) } // lets consider fetchData is in-built function
main
/* lets consider fetchData is a in-built function that gets data from other server. We are passing success para to just mimic the server otherwise it does not serve any purpose here. */ async function getData(){ try{ let result = await fetchData(true); console.log(result) //fetched successfully } catch(err){ console.log(err); // in case of rejection } } getData(); // load other code
The other code will also run regardless of data fetched or not. It improves performance and improve quality of our code.
error-handling-by-aryan
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