luau-promise/lib/README.md

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---
title: Promise
docs:
desc: A Promise is an object that represents a value that will exist in the future, but doesn't right now. Promises allow you to then attach callbacks that can run once the value becomes available (known as *resolving*), or if an error has occurred (known as *rejecting*).
types:
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- name: Status
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desc: An enum value used to represent the Promise's status.
kind: enum
type:
Started:
desc: The Promise is executing, and not settled yet.
Resolved:
desc: The Promise finished successfully.
Rejected:
desc: The Promise was rejected.
Cancelled:
desc: The Promise was cancelled before it finished.
properties:
- name: Status
tags: [ 'read only', 'static', 'enums' ]
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type: Status
desc: A table containing all members of the `Status` enum, e.g., `Promise.Status.Resolved`.
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functions:
- name: new
desc: |
Construct a new Promise that will be resolved or rejected with the given callbacks.
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If you `resolve` with a Promise, it will be chained onto.
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You can safely yield within the executor function and it will not block the creating thread.
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```lua
local myFunction()
return Promise.new(function(resolve, reject, onCancel)
wait(1)
resolve("Hello world!")
end)
end
myFunction():andThen(print)
```
Errors that occur during execution will be caught and turned into a rejection automatically. If `error()` is called with a table, that table will be the rejection value. Otherwise, string errors will be converted into `Promise.Error(Promise.Error.Kind.ExecutionError)` objects for tracking debug information.
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You may register an optional cancellation hook by using the `onCancel` argument:
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* This should be used to abort any ongoing operations leading up to the promise being settled.
* Call the `onCancel` function with a function callback as its only argument to set a hook which will in turn be called when/if the promise is cancelled.
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* `onCancel` returns `true` if the Promise was already cancelled when you called `onCancel`.
* Calling `onCancel` with no argument will not override a previously set cancellation hook, but it will still return `true` if the Promise is currently cancelled.
* You can set the cancellation hook at any time before resolving.
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* When a promise is cancelled, calls to `resolve` or `reject` will be ignored, regardless of if you set a cancellation hook or not.
static: true
params:
- name: executor
type:
kind: function
params:
- name: resolve
type:
kind: function
params:
- name: "..."
type: ...any?
returns: void
- name: reject
type:
kind: function
params:
- name: "..."
type: ...any?
returns: void
- name: onCancel
type:
kind: function
params:
- name: abortHandler
kind: function
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returns:
- type: boolean
desc: "Returns `true` if the Promise was already cancelled at the time of calling `onCancel`."
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returns: Promise
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- name: defer
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since: 2.0.0
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desc: |
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The same as [[Promise.new]], except execution begins after the next `Heartbeat` event.
This is a spiritual replacement for `spawn`, but it does not suffer from the same [issues](https://eryn.io/gist/3db84579866c099cdd5bb2ff37947cec) as `spawn`.
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```lua
local function waitForChild(instance, childName, timeout)
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return Promise.defer(function(resolve, reject)
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local child = instance:WaitForChild(childName, timeout)
;(child and resolve or reject)(child)
end)
end
```
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static: true
params:
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- name: deferExecutor
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type:
kind: function
params:
- name: resolve
type:
kind: function
params:
- name: "..."
type: ...any?
returns: void
- name: reject
type:
kind: function
params:
- name: "..."
type: ...any?
returns: void
- name: onCancel
type:
kind: function
params:
- name: abortHandler
kind: function
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returns:
- type: boolean
desc: "Returns `true` if the Promise was already cancelled at the time of calling `onCancel`."
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returns: Promise
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- name: try
desc: |
Begins a Promise chain, calling a function and returning a Promise resolving with its return value. If the function errors, the returned Promise will be rejected with the error. You can safely yield within the Promise.try callback.
::: tip
`Promise.try` is similar to [[Promise.promisify]], except the callback is invoked immediately instead of returning a new function.
:::
```lua
Promise.try(function()
return math.random(1, 2) == 1 and "ok" or error("Oh an error!")
end)
:andThen(function(text)
print(text)
end)
:catch(function(err)
warn("Something went wrong")
end)
```
static: true
params:
- name: callback
type:
kind: function
params: "...: ...any?"
returns: "...any?"
- name: "..."
type: "...any?"
desc: Arguments for the callback
returns:
- type: "Promise<...any?>"
desc: The return value of the passed callback.
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- name: promisify
desc: |
Wraps a function that yields into one that returns a Promise.
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Any errors that occur while executing the function will be turned into rejections.
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::: tip
`Promise.promisify` is similar to [[Promise.try]], except the callback is returned as a callable function instead of being invoked immediately.
:::
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```lua
local sleep = Promise.promisify(wait)
sleep(1):andThen(print)
```
```lua
local isPlayerInGroup = Promise.promisify(function(player, groupId)
return player:IsInGroup(groupId)
end)
```
static: true
params:
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- name: callback
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type:
kind: function
params: "...: ...any?"
returns:
- desc: The function acts like the passed function but now returns a Promise of its return values.
type:
kind: function
params:
- name: "..."
type: "...any?"
desc: The same arguments the wrapped function usually takes.
returns:
- name: "*"
desc: The return values from the wrapped function.
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- name: resolve
desc: Creates an immediately resolved Promise with the given value.
static: true
params: "value: ...any"
returns: Promise<...any>
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- name: reject
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desc: |
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Creates an immediately rejected Promise with the given value.
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::: tip
Someone needs to consume this rejection (i.e. `:catch()` it), otherwise it will emit an unhandled Promise rejection warning on the next frame. Thus, you should not create and store rejected Promises for later use. Only create them on-demand as needed.
:::
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static: true
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params: "value: ...any"
returns: Promise<...any>
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- name: all
desc: |
Accepts an array of Promises and returns a new promise that:
* is resolved after all input promises resolve.
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* is rejected if *any* input promises reject.
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Note: Only the first return value from each promise will be present in the resulting array.
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After any input Promise rejects, all other input Promises that are still pending will be cancelled if they have no other consumers.
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static: true
params: "promises: array<Promise<T>>"
returns: Promise<array<T>>
- name: allSettled
desc: |
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Accepts an array of Promises and returns a new Promise that resolves with an array of in-place Statuses when all input Promises have settled. This is equivalent to mapping `promise:finally` over the array of Promises.
static: true
params: "promises: array<Promise<T>>"
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returns: Promise<array<Status>>
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- name: race
desc: |
Accepts an array of Promises and returns a new promise that is resolved or rejected as soon as any Promise in the array resolves or rejects.
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::: warning
If the first Promise to settle from the array settles with a rejection, the resulting Promise from `race` will reject.
If you instead want to tolerate rejections, and only care about at least one Promise resolving, you should use [[Promise.any]] or [[Promise.some]] instead.
:::
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All other Promises that don't win the race will be cancelled if they have no other consumers.
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static: true
params: "promises: array<Promise<T>>"
returns: Promise<T>
- name: some
desc: |
Accepts an array of Promises and returns a Promise that is resolved as soon as `count` Promises are resolved from the input array. The resolved array values are in the order that the Promises resolved in. When this Promise resolves, all other pending Promises are cancelled if they have no other consumers.
`count` 0 results in an empty array. The resultant array will never have more than `count` elements.
static: true
params: "promises: array<Promise<T>>, count: number"
returns: Promise<array<T>>
- name: any
desc: |
Accepts an array of Promises and returns a Promise that is resolved as soon as *any* of the input Promises resolves. It will reject only if *all* input Promises reject. As soon as one Promises resolves, all other pending Promises are cancelled if they have no other consumers.
Resolves directly with the value of the first resolved Promise. This is essentially [[Promise.some]] with `1` count, except the Promise resolves with the value directly instead of an array with one element.
static: true
params: "promises: array<Promise<T>>"
returns: Promise<T>
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- name: delay
desc: |
Returns a Promise that resolves after `seconds` seconds have passed. The Promise resolves with the actual amount of time that was waited.
This function is **not** a wrapper around `wait`. `Promise.delay` uses a custom scheduler which provides more accurate timing. As an optimization, cancelling this Promise instantly removes the task from the scheduler.
::: warning
Passing `NaN`, infinity, or a number less than 1/60 is equivalent to passing 1/60.
:::
params: "seconds: number"
returns: Promise<number>
static: true
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- name: each
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since: 2.0.0
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desc: |
Iterates serially over the given an array of values, calling the predicate callback on each value before continuing.
If the predicate returns a Promise, we wait for that Promise to resolve before moving on to the next item
in the array.
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::: tip
`Promise.each` is similar to `Promise.all`, except the Promises are ran in order instead of all at once.
But because Promises are eager, by the time they are created, they're already running. Thus, we need a way to defer creation of each Promise until a later time.
The predicate function exists as a way for us to operate on our data instead of creating a new closure for each Promise. If you would prefer, you can pass in an array of functions, and in the predicate, call the function and return its return value.
:::
```lua
Promise.each({
"foo",
"bar",
"baz",
"qux"
}, function(value, index)
return Promise.delay(1):andThen(function()
print(("%d) Got %s!"):format(index, value))
end)
end)
--[[
(1 second passes)
> 1) Got foo!
(1 second passes)
> 2) Got bar!
(1 second passes)
> 3) Got baz!
(1 second passes)
> 4) Got qux!
]]
```
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If the Promise a predicate returns rejects, the Promise from `Promise.each` is also rejected with the same value.
If the array of values contains a Promise, when we get to that point in the list, we wait for the Promise to resolve before calling the predicate with the value.
If a Promise in the array of values is already Rejected when `Promise.each` is called, `Promise.each` rejects with that value immediately (the predicate callback will never be called even once). If a Promise in the list is already Cancelled when `Promise.each` is called, `Promise.each` rejects with `Promise.Error(Promise.Error.Kind.AlreadyCancelled`). If a Promise in the array of values is Started at first, but later rejects, `Promise.each` will reject with that value and iteration will not continue once iteration encounters that value.
Returns a Promise containing an array of the returned/resolved values from the predicate for each item in the array of values.
If this Promise returned from `Promise.each` rejects or is cancelled for any reason, the following are true:
- Iteration will not continue.
- Any Promises within the array of values will now be cancelled if they have no other consumers.
- The Promise returned from the currently active predicate will be cancelled if it hasn't resolved yet.
params:
- name: list
type: "array<T | Promise<T>>"
- name: predicate
desc: The callback to call for each value in the list.
type:
kind: function
params: "value: T, index: number"
returns: U | Promise<U>
returns: Promise<array<U>>
static: true
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- name: retry
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since: 2.0.0
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desc: |
Repeatedly calls a Promise-returning function up to `times` number of times, until the returned Promise resolves.
If the amount of retries is exceeded, the function will return the latest rejected Promise.
params:
- name: callback
type:
kind: function
params: "...: P"
returns: Promise<T>
- name: times
type: number
- name: "..."
type: "P"
optional: true
returns: Promise<T>
static: true
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- name: fromEvent
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since: 2.0.0
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desc: |
Converts an event into a Promise which resolves the next time the event fires.
The optional `predicate` callback, if passed, will receive the event arguments and should return `true` or `false`, based on if this fired event should resolve the Promise or not. If `true`, the Promise resolves. If `false`, nothing happens and the predicate will be rerun the next time the event fires.
The Promise will resolve with the event arguments.
::: tip
This function will work given any object with a `Connect` method. This includes all Roblox events.
:::
```lua
-- Creates a Promise which only resolves when `somePart` is touched by a part named `"Something specific"`.
return Promise.fromEvent(somePart.Touched, function(part)
return part.Name == "Something specific"
end)
```
params:
- name: event
type:
kind: interface
type:
Connect:
type:
kind: function
params:
- name: callback
type:
kind: function
params: "...: P"
desc: Any object with a `Connect` method. This includes all Roblox events.
- name: predicate
optional: true
type:
kind: function
params: "...: P"
returns: boolean
desc: A function which determines if the Promise should resolve with the given value, or wait for the next event to check again.
returns: Promise<P>
static: true
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- name: is
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desc: Checks whether the given object is a Promise via duck typing. This only checks if the object is a table and has an `andThen` method.
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static: true
params: "object: any"
returns:
- type: boolean
desc: "`true` if the given `object` is a Promise."
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# Instance methods
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- name: andThen
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desc: |
Chains onto an existing Promise and returns a new Promise.
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::: warning
Within the failure handler, you should never assume that the rejection value is a string. Some rejections within the Promise library are represented by [[Error]] objects. If you want to treat it as a string for debugging, you should call `tostring` on it first.
:::
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Return a Promise from the success or failure handler and it will be chained onto.
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params:
- name: successHandler
type:
kind: function
params: "...: ...any?"
returns: ...any?
- name: failureHandler
optional: true
type:
kind: function
params: "...: ...any?"
returns: ...any?
returns: Promise<...any?>
overloads:
- params:
- name: successHandler
type:
kind: function
params: "...: ...any?"
returns: Promise<T>
- name: failureHandler
optional: true
type:
kind: function
params: "...: ...any?"
returns: Promise<T>
returns: Promise<T>
- name: catch
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desc: |
Shorthand for `Promise:andThen(nil, failureHandler)`.
::: warning
Within the failure handler, you should never assume that the rejection value is a string. Some rejections within the Promise library are represented by [[Error]] objects. If you want to treat it as a string for debugging, you should call `tostring` on it first.
:::
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params:
- name: failureHandler
type:
kind: function
params: "...: ...any?"
returns: ...any?
returns: Promise<...any?>
overloads:
- params:
- name: failureHandler
type:
kind: function
params: "...: ...any?"
returns: Promise<T>
returns: Promise<T>
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- name: tap
desc: |
Similar to [[Promise.andThen]], except the return value is the same as the value passed to the handler. In other words, you can insert a `:tap` into a Promise chain without affecting the value that downstream Promises receive.
```lua
getTheValue()
:tap(print)
:andThen(function(theValue)
print("Got", theValue, "even though print returns nil!")
end)
```
If you return a Promise from the tap handler callback, its value will be discarded but `tap` will still wait until it resolves before passing the original value through.
params:
- name: tapHandler
type:
kind: function
params: "...: ...any?"
returns: ...any?
returns: Promise<...any?>
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- name: finally
desc: |
Set a handler that will be called regardless of the promise's fate. The handler is called when the promise is resolved, rejected, *or* cancelled.
Returns a new promise chained from this promise.
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::: warning
If the Promise is cancelled, any Promises chained off of it with `andThen` won't run. Only Promises chained with `finally` or `done` will run in the case of cancellation.
:::
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params:
- name: finallyHandler
type:
kind: function
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params: "status: Status"
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returns: ...any?
returns: Promise<...any?>
overloads:
- params:
- name: finallyHandler
type:
kind: function
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params: "status: Status"
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returns: Promise<T>
returns: Promise<T>
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- name: done
desc: |
Set a handler that will be called only if the Promise resolves or is cancelled. This method is similar to `finally`, except it doesn't catch rejections.
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::: tip
`done` should be reserved specifically when you want to perform some operation after the Promise is finished (like `finally`), but you don't want to consume rejections (like in <a href="/roblox-lua-promise/lib/Examples.html#cancellable-animation-sequence">this example</a>). You should use `andThen` instead if you only care about the Resolved case.
:::
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::: warning
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Like `finally`, if the Promise is cancelled, any Promises chained off of it with `andThen` won't run. Only Promises chained with `done` and `finally` will run in the case of cancellation.
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:::
Returns a new promise chained from this promise.
params:
- name: doneHandler
type:
kind: function
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params: "status: Status"
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returns: ...any?
returns: Promise<...any?>
overloads:
- params:
- name: doneHandler
type:
kind: function
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params: "status: Status"
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returns: Promise<T>
returns: Promise<T>
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- name: andThenCall
desc: |
Attaches an `andThen` handler to this Promise that calls the given callback with the predefined arguments. The resolved value is discarded.
```lua
promise:andThenCall(someFunction, "some", "arguments")
```
This is sugar for
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```lua
promise:andThen(function()
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return someFunction("some", "arguments")
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end)
```
params:
- name: callback
type:
kind: function
params: "...: ...any?"
returns: "any"
- name: "..."
type: "...any?"
desc: Arguments which will be passed to the callback.
returns: Promise
- name: finallyCall
desc: |
Same as `andThenCall`, except for `finally`.
Attaches a `finally` handler to this Promise that calls the given callback with the predefined arguments.
params:
- name: callback
type:
kind: function
params: "...: ...any?"
returns: "any"
- name: "..."
type: "...any?"
desc: Arguments which will be passed to the callback.
returns: Promise
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- name: doneCall
desc: |
Same as `andThenCall`, except for `done`.
Attaches a `done` handler to this Promise that calls the given callback with the predefined arguments.
params:
- name: callback
type:
kind: function
params: "...: ...any?"
returns: "any"
- name: "..."
type: "...any?"
desc: Arguments which will be passed to the callback.
returns: Promise
- name: andThenReturn
desc: |
Attaches an `andThen` handler to this Promise that discards the resolved value and returns the given value from it.
```lua
promise:andThenReturn("some", "values")
```
This is sugar for
```lua
promise:andThen(function()
return "some", "values"
end)
```
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::: warning
Promises are eager, so if you pass a Promise to `andThenReturn`, it will begin executing before `andThenReturn` is reached in the chain. Likewise, if you pass a Promise created from [[Promise.reject]] into `andThenReturn`, it's possible that this will trigger the unhandled rejection warning. If you need to return a Promise, it's usually best practice to use [[Promise.andThen]].
:::
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params:
- name: "..."
type: "...any?"
desc: Values to return from the function.
returns: Promise<...any?>
- name: finallyReturn
desc: |
Attaches a `finally` handler to this Promise that discards the resolved value and returns the given value from it.
```lua
promise:finallyReturn("some", "values")
```
This is sugar for
```lua
promise:finally(function()
return "some", "values"
end)
```
params:
- name: "..."
type: "...any?"
desc: Values to return from the function.
returns: Promise<...any?>
- name: doneReturn
desc: |
Attaches a `done` handler to this Promise that discards the resolved value and returns the given value from it.
```lua
promise:doneReturn("some", "values")
```
This is sugar for
```lua
promise:done(function()
return "some", "values"
end)
```
params:
- name: "..."
type: "...any?"
desc: Values to return from the function.
returns: Promise<...any?>
- name: timeout
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params: "seconds: number, rejectionValue: T?"
desc: |
Returns a new Promise that resolves if the chained Promise resolves within `seconds` seconds, or rejects if execution time exceeds `seconds`. The chained Promise will be cancelled if the timeout is reached.
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Rejects with `rejectionValue` if it is non-nil. If a `rejectionValue` is not given, it will reject with a `Promise.Error(Promise.Error.Kind.TimedOut)`. This can be checked with [[Error.isKind]].
Sugar for:
```lua
Promise.race({
Promise.delay(seconds):andThen(function()
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return Promise.reject(rejectionValue == nil and Promise.Error.new({ kind = Promise.Error.Kind.TimedOut }) or rejectionValue)
end),
promise
})
```
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returns: Promise<T>
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- name: cancel
desc: |
Cancels this promise, preventing the promise from resolving or rejecting. Does not do anything if the promise is already settled.
Cancellations will propagate upwards and downwards through chained promises.
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Promises will only be cancelled if all of their consumers are also cancelled. This is to say that if you call `andThen` twice on the same promise, and you cancel only one of the child promises, it will not cancel the parent promise until the other child promise is also cancelled.
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- name: now
desc: |
Chains a Promise from this one that is resolved if this Promise is already resolved, and rejected if it is not resolved at the time of calling `:now()`. This can be used to ensure your `andThen` handler occurs on the same frame as the root Promise execution.
```lua
doSomething()
:now()
:andThen(function(value)
print("Got", value, "synchronously.")
end)
```
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If this Promise is still running, Rejected, or Cancelled, the Promise returned from `:now()` will reject with the `rejectionValue` if passed, otherwise with a `Promise.Error(Promise.Error.Kind.NotResolvedInTime)`. This can be checked with [[Error.isKind]].
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params: "rejectionValue: T?"
returns: Promise<T>
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- name: await
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tags: [ 'yields' ]
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desc: |
Yields the current thread until the given Promise completes. Returns true if the Promise resolved, followed by the values that the promise resolved or rejected with.
::: warning
If the Promise gets cancelled, this function will return `false`, which is indistinguishable from a rejection. If you need to differentiate, you should use [[Promise.awaitStatus]] instead.
:::
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returns:
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- desc: "`true` if the Promise successfully resolved."
type: boolean
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- desc: The values that the Promise resolved or rejected with.
type: ...any?
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- name: awaitStatus
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tags: [ 'yields' ]
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desc: Yields the current thread until the given Promise completes. Returns the Promise's status, followed by the values that the promise resolved or rejected with.
returns:
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- type: Status
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desc: The Promise's status.
- type: ...any?
desc: The values that the Promise resolved or rejected with.
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- name: expect
tags: [ 'yields' ]
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desc: |
Yields the current thread until the given Promise completes. Returns the the values that the promise resolved with.
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This is essentially sugar for:
```lua
select(2, assert(promise:await()))
```
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**Errors** if the Promise rejects or gets cancelled.
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returns:
- type: ...any?
desc: The values that the Promise resolved with.
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- name: getStatus
desc: Returns the current Promise status.
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returns: Status
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---
<ApiDocs />