async function
The async function
declaration declares an async function where the await
keyword is permitted within the function body. The async
and await
keywords enable asynchronous, promise-based behavior to be written in a cleaner style, avoiding the need to explicitly configure promise chains.
Async functions may also be defined as expressions.
name
The function's name.
param
Optional
The name of an argument to be passed to the function.
statements
Optional
The statements comprising the body of the function. The await
mechanism may be used.
A Promise
which will be resolved with the value returned by the async function, or rejected with an exception thrown from, or uncaught within, the async function.
Async functions can contain zero or more await
expressions. Await expressions make promise-returning functions behave as though they're synchronous by suspending execution until the returned promise is fulfilled or rejected. The resolved value of the promise is treated as the return value of the await expression. Use of async
and await
enables the use of ordinary try
/ catch
blocks around asynchronous code.
Note: The await
keyword is only valid inside async functions within regular JavaScript code. If you use it outside of an async function's body, you will get a SyntaxError
.
await
can be used on its own with JavaScript modules.
Note: The purpose of async
/await
is to simplify the syntax necessary to consume promise-based APIs. The behavior of async
/await
is similar to combining generators and promises.
Async functions always return a promise. If the return value of an async function is not explicitly a promise, it will be implicitly wrapped in a promise.
For example, consider the following code:
It is similar to:
Note:
Even though the return value of an async function behaves as if it's wrapped in a Promise.resolve
, they are not equivalent.
An async function will return a different reference, whereas Promise.resolve
returns the same reference if the given value is a promise.
It can be a problem when you want to check the equality of a promise and a return value of an async function.
The body of an async function can be thought of as being split by zero or more await expressions. Top-level code, up to and including the first await expression (if there is one), is run synchronously. In this way, an async function without an await expression will run synchronously. If there is an await expression inside the function body, however, the async function will always complete asynchronously.
For example:j
It is also equivalent to:
Code after each await expression can be thought of as existing in a .then
callback. In this way a promise chain is progressively constructed with each reentrant step through the function. The return value forms the final link in the chain.
In the following example, we successively await two promises. Progress moves through function foo
in three stages.
The first line of the body of function
foo
is executed synchronously, with the await expression configured with the pending promise. Progress throughfoo
is then suspended and control is yielded back to the function that calledfoo
.Some time later, when the first promise has either been fulfilled or rejected, control moves back into
foo
. The result of the first promise fulfillment (if it was not rejected) is returned from the await expression. Here1
is assigned toresult1
. Progress continues, and the second await expression is evaluated. Again, progress throughfoo
is suspended and control is yielded.Some time later, when the second promise has either been fulfilled or rejected, control re-enters
foo
. The result of the second promise resolution is returned from the second await expression. Here2
is assigned toresult2
. Control moves to the return expression (if any). The default return value ofundefined
is returned as the resolution value of the current promise.
Note how the promise chain is not built-up in one go. Instead, the promise chain is constructed in stages as control is successively yielded from and returned to the async function. As a result, we must be mindful of error handling behavior when dealing with concurrent asynchronous operations.
For example, in the following code an unhandled promise rejection error will be thrown, even if a .catch
handler has been configured further along the promise chain. This is because p2
will not be "wired into" the promise chain until control returns from p1
.
async function
declarations are hoisted to the top of their scope and can be called anywhere in their scope.
await and parallelism
In sequentialStart
, execution suspends 2 seconds for the first await
, and then another second for the second await
. The second timer is not created until the first has already fired, so the code finishes after 3 seconds.
In concurrentStart
, both timers are created and then await
ed. The timers run concurrently, which means the code finishes in 2 rather than 3 seconds, i.e. the slowest timer. However, the await
calls still run in series, which means the second await
will wait for the first one to finish. In this case, the result of the fastest timer is processed after the slowest.
If you wish to safely perform two or more jobs in parallel, you must await a call to Promise.all
, or Promise.allSettled
.
Warning: The functions concurrentStart
and concurrentPromise
are not functionally equivalent.
In concurrentStart
, if promise fast
rejects before promise slow
is fulfilled, then an unhandled promise rejection error will be raised, regardless of whether the caller has configured a catch clause.
In concurrentPromise
, Promise.all
wires up the promise chain in one go, meaning that the operation will fail-fast regardless of the order of rejection of the promises, and the error will always occur within the configured promise chain, enabling it to be caught in the normal way.
An API that returns a Promise
will result in a promise chain, and it splits the function into many parts. Consider the following code:
it can be rewritten with a single async function as follows:
Alternatively, you can chain the promise with catch()
:
In the two rewritten versions, notice there is no await
statement after the return
keyword, although that would be valid too: The return value of an async function is implicitly wrapped in Promise.resolve
- if it's not already a promise itself (as in the examples).
Last updated