No. We can't do that yet.
ES6 promises do not support cancellation yet. It's on its way, and its design is something a lot of people worked really hard on. Sound cancellation semantics are hard to get right and this is work in progress. There are interesting debates on the "fetch" repo, on esdiscuss and on several other repos on GH but I'd just be patient if I were you.
But, but, but.. cancellation is really important!
It is, the reality of the matter is cancellation is really an important scenario in client-side programming. The cases you describe like aborting web requests are important and they're everywhere.
So... the language screwed me!
Yeah, sorry about that. Promises had to get in first before further things were specified - so they went in without some useful stuff like .finally
and .cancel
- it's on its way though, to the spec through the DOM. Cancellation is not an afterthought it's just a time constraint and a more iterative approach to API design.
So what can I do?
You have several alternatives:
- Use a third party library like bluebird who can move a lot faster than the spec and thus have cancellation as well as a bunch of other goodies - this is what large companies like WhatsApp do.
- Pass a cancellation token.
Using a third party library is pretty obvious. As for a token, you can make your method take a function in and then call it, as such:
function getWithCancel(url, token) { // the token is for cancellation
var xhr = new XMLHttpRequest;
xhr.open("GET", url);
return new Promise(function(resolve, reject) {
xhr.onload = function() { resolve(xhr.responseText); });
token.cancel = function() { // SPECIFY CANCELLATION
xhr.abort(); // abort request
reject(new Error("Cancelled")); // reject the promise
};
xhr.onerror = reject;
});
};
Which would let you do:
var token = {};
var promise = getWithCancel("/someUrl", token);
// later we want to abort the promise:
token.cancel();
Your actual use case - last
This isn't too hard with the token approach:
function last(fn) {
var lastToken = { cancel: function(){} }; // start with no op
return function() {
lastToken.cancel();
var args = Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments);
args.push(lastToken);
return fn.apply(this, args);
};
}
Which would let you do:
var synced = last(getWithCancel);
synced("/url1?q=a"); // this will get canceled
synced("/url1?q=ab"); // this will get canceled too
synced("/url1?q=abc"); // this will get canceled too
synced("/url1?q=abcd").then(function() {
// only this will run
});
And no, libraries like Bacon and Rx don't "shine" here because they're observable libraries, they just have the same advantage user level promise libraries have by not being spec bound. I guess we'll wait to have and see in ES2016 when observables go native. They are nifty for typeahead though.
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