Judging from your example, I would assume that you already saw Sequences part of Q readme, but failed to understand it.
Original example used "waterfall" model, when the output of each function passed as an input to the next one:
var funcs = [foo, bar, baz, qux];
var result = Q(initialVal);
funcs.forEach(function (f) {
result = result.then(f);
});
return result;
But you just want to execute all our functions in sequence, so you could simply bind each function with its variables:
var args = ["first", "second", "third", "fourth"];
var result = Q();
args.forEach(function (t) {
result = result.then(treat.bind(null, t));
});
return result;
In my example treat
function will be called 4 times sequentially, and result
promise will be resolved with the value of latest treat
call (results of all previous calls will be ignored).
The trick is that .then
method accepts a handler which will be called after current promise will be resolved and returns a new promise. So, you should pass to .then
a function which should be called on the next step of your execution chain. treat.bind(null, t)
binds treat
function with attribute t
. In other words, it returns a new function, which will invoke treat
, passing t
as its first argument.
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