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p-run-loop

v0.3.0

Published

`p-run-loop` providing a controlled way to manage the execution order of promises. It leverages proxies to queue and manage promises, making it easier to handle asynchronous operations sequentially, especially asynchronous third-party dependencies.

Downloads

8

Readme

p-run-loop

p-run-loop providing a controlled way to manage the execution order of promises. It leverages proxies to queue and manage promises, making it easier to handle asynchronous operations sequentially, especially asynchronous third-party dependencies.

Installation

npm install p-run-loop

Usage

Importing and Initializing

First, import the p-run-loop class and create an instance of it. You can pass an optional boolean parameter to the constructor to enable or disable automatic promise resolution.

import PLoop from 'p-run-loop'

const loop = new PLoop() // Auto mode enabled by default
const manualLoop = new PLoop(false) // Auto mode disabled

Adding Asynchronous Functions

To add a function to the loop, use the add method. This method returns a proxied version of the function that will be executed according to the loop's rules.

const proxiedFunction = loop.add(originalFunction)

Auto Mode

In auto mode, promises are resolved automatically in the order they were added. This is the default behavior.

const loop = new PLoop()

const fn1 = loop.add(async () => {
  console.log('Function 1')
})

const fn2 = loop.add(async () => {
  console.log('Function 2')
})

fn1()
fn2()

In this example, "Function 1" will always be logged before "Function 2", regardless of the individual execution times of the functions.

Manual Mode

In manual mode, you have control over when the next promise in the queue is resolved by calling the next or nextAll methods.

const loop = new PLoop(false)

const fn1 = loop.add(async () => {
  console.log('Function 1')
})

const fn2 = loop.add(async () => {
  console.log('Function 2')
})

fn1()
fn2()

// Manually resolve the next promise in the queue
loop.next() // Logs: "Function 1"

// Resolve all remaining promises in the queue
loop.nextAll() // Logs: "Function 2"

API

Constructor

constructor(auto?: boolean)
  • auto (optional): A boolean indicating whether promises should be resolved automatically. Defaults to true.

Methods

add

add(fn: Function): Function
  • fn: The function to be added to the loop.
  • Returns: A proxied version of the function.

next

next(): void

Resolves the next promise in the queue. Only available when auto is set to false.

nextAll

nextAll(): void

Resolves all remaining promises in the queue. Only available when auto is set to false.

Example

Here is a complete example demonstrating the usage of p-run-loop:

import PLoop from 'p-run-loop'

const loop = new PLoop()

const fn1 = loop.add(async () => {
  console.log('Function 1')
  return 'Result 1'
})

const fn2 = loop.add(async () => {
  console.log('Function 2')
  return 'Result 2'
})

fn1().then(result => console.log(result))
fn2().then(result => console.log(result))

Output:

Function 1
Result 1
Function 2
Result 2

In this example, "Function 1" and its result will always be logged before "Function 2" and its result, maintaining the order of execution.

Credits

Inspired by p-mutex