If you came here because you dropped "how to make javascript fetch synchronous" into a search engine:
That doesn't make much sense. Performing network operations is not something which requires CPU work, thus blocking it during a fetch(...)
makes little sense. Instead, properly work with asynchrony as shown in the duplicates linked above.
Original answer for the question:
You want your fetch function to return sth:
function fetchOHLC(yUrl){
return fetch(yUrl)
.then(response => response.json())
.then(function(response) {
alert(JSON.stringify(response.query));
var t = response.created;
var o = response.open;
var h = response.high;
var l = response.low;
var c = response.close;
return {t,o,h,l,c};
})
.catch(function(error) {
console.log(error);
});
}
Now fetchData contains a promise, which can be easily used:
var fetchData = fetchOHLC(yUrl);
fetchData.then(alert); //not empty ! its {t,o,h,l,c}
If you want some fancy ES7, you could rewrite the whole thing like this:
async function fetchOHLC(yUrl) {
try {
const res = await ( await fetch(yUrl) ).json();
alert(JSON.stringify(r.query));
return {t:r.created,o:r.open,h:r.high,l:r.low,c:r.close};
} catch(e) { console.log(e); }
}
(async function () {
const fetchData = await fetchOHLC(yUrl);
alert(fetchData);
})()
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