Is there any attempt to bring async/await feature from C# 5.0 to any language which can be compiled to JavaScript (such as CoffeScript)? (So it can be used either in web browser or in nod开发者_Go百科e.js.)
Async is on feature list for JavaScript harmony. So far there are numerous attempts to provide such functionality in the browser or in node, none of them seem to be compatible with harmony proposal though:
- Async can be simulated with JS1.7 generators (see task.js). Not yet supported out-of-the-box by V8 (without experimental mode), but works in FF. Possibly traceur or Masacra compiler can be used to bring generators to other environments.
- There is node-fibers library providing other mechanism for asynchronous programming in node (scarifies performance though). Other attempt basing on v8cgi is described here.
- Rhino has continuations out of the box providing good alternative. This is why Ringo.js might be worth looking at.
- Few solutions basing on js2js translation are available, e.g: jscx, NarrativeJS, jwacs, StratifiedJS. Some support integration with node.
- There are many promise/future libraries trying to solve callbacks problem without extending syntax, however they all suffer from composability issues, i.e. cannot use language constructs like loops across callbacks.
async/await looks to be coming in ECMAScript 7. This proposal was accepted into stage 1 of the specification process in January 2014.
The good news is that Googles traceur compiler already supports it, so you could start using it today.
Sample syntax:
async function asyncValue(value) {
await timeout(50);
return value;
}
async/await is also on the TypeScript roadmap.
I'm not familiar with C#, but it sounds like what you're looking for is some sort of continuations, so that instead of writing
fs.readFile 'foo.txt', (err, data) ->
myFunc data
you could instead just write something like
data = &fs.readFile 'foo.txt' # not a real syntax
myFunc data
This isn't something that JavaScript or CoffeeScript provides. However, there are several other compilers that can do something like this:
- TameJS - JavaScript-based, mainly just adds this feature
- Kaffeine - JavaScript-based, adds a bunch of features
- coco - CoffeeScript-based
See also: List of languages that compile to JavaScript on the CoffeeScript wiki.
Yes there is, and you don't even need to compile it, because it is just a simple JavaScript library.
One of my projects called sharpnr.js has the aim to extend JavaScript with great features of C# (and .NET of course) like await/async, or LINQ.
The library is currently in beta, but it's stable and supports almost every statement (for example loops, switch, if), and works well with existing libraries (like jQuery).
The await/async syntax is almost identical to the C# version:
var getAsync = async(function(url) {
var result = await; $.get(url);
$("#test").html(result);
});
getAsync("http://www.sharpnrjs.com");
Working example on jsfiddle.
You can download the library from github.
When Node 0.11 (with v8 3.19 [1], which has generators[2]) arrives, you can use Galaxy and code like below.
However, only behind a flag. They are supported natively in ioJS.
function* countLines(path) {
var names = yield fs.readdir(path);
var total = 0;
for (var i = 0; i < names.length; i++) {
var fullname = path + '/' + names[i];
if ((yield fs.stat(fullname)).isDirectory()) {
total += yield countLines(fullname);
} else {
var count = (yield fs.readFile(fullname, 'utf8')).split('\n').length;
console.log(fullname + ': ' + count);
total += count;
}
}
return total;
}
function* projectLineCounts() {
var total = 0;
total += yield countLines(__dirname + '/../examples');
total += yield countLines(__dirname + '/../lib');
total += yield countLines(__dirname + '/../test');
console.log('TOTAL: ' + total);
return total;
}
You can have async/await in Google Chrome with Experimental JS flag enabled, using built-in Generators, Promises and a tiny spawn() function by Jake Archibald:
spawn(function*() { //this function is async
let story = yield getJSON('story.json'); //yield is like await
addHtmlToPage(story.heading);
});
Alternatively, you can use:
- Q with async() and spawn() by Kris Kowal
- Co by Visionmedia
- Awaitable by Jonathan Ong
- Task.js by Mozilla
- Then-yield by Forbes Lindesay
- When by cujoJS
For browsers not supporting ES6, there is Facebook Regenerator.
good news,
nodejs supports it from v7.0.0 (well, partially), still need a harmony flag --harmony_async_await
, and apparently has some bugs including memory leak, for more details, but there are some concerns as well, and one commentator advises to wait till v8 version 55 which might not be long.
For completeness: I have found that Saltarelle Compiler (which actually compiles C# to JavaScript) also supports await/async.
If you are interested in .NET style asynchronous programming for JavaScript you should look into Rx for JavaScript. Rx for JavaScrpt is Microsoft's JavaScript port of the Reactive Framework. The reactive framework is described as:
A library to compose asynchronous and event-based programs using observable collections and LINQ-style query operators.
You can download Rx for JavaScript here
And you can read more about it, including examples here
You can also install it on node with npm:
npm install rx
It works well with libraries like jQuery, however I am not a CoffeeScript programmer, so I'm not sure what support there is for interoperability with other JavaScript libraries in this language.
Javascript is providing async-await feature with ECMA 7. Now all asynchronous function can be awaited by promisifying them and waiting for promise to resolve. Most of the asynchronous functions like DB calls, API calls, fs and events are returning promise now in Javascript and nodeJs. Now with async-await code is more cleaner, understandable, debugged.
Example
function timeout(){
return new Promise( resolve => {
setTimeout(function(){
resolve(true);
}, 5000);
});
}
async function f(){
let result = await timeout();
}
there is https://github.com/loveencounterflow/coffy-script which is the attempt to add yield
to CoffeeScript. CoffyScript is very new and as i'm writing this i'm pondering over the difficulties posed by require.extensions
being a global, and whether i should be a separate extension. that said, CoffyScript does work, and you will find on my github page numerous examples that show how to write quite succinct asynchronous code using suspend
, resume
, and yield
.
given that yield
has arrived in NodeJS 11.2, i believe we should research how to use generators / coroutines to make asynchronous programming more palatable. i for one have tossed out promises, the experience with them having not been so pleasant. Then again, it may take a while before yield
becomes available in all major browsers.
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