Generator based control flow goodness for nodejs and the browser, using promises, letting you write non-blocking code in a nice-ish way.
co@4.0.0
has been released, which now relies on promises.
It is a stepping stone towards ES7 async/await.
The primary API change is how co()
is invoked.
Before, co
returned a "thunk", which you then called with a callback and optional arguments.
Now, co()
returns a promise.
;
If you want to convert a co
-generator-function into a regular function that returns a promise,
you now use co.wrap(fn*)
.
var fn = co; ;
co@4+
requires a Promise
implementation.
For versions of node < 0.11
and for many older browsers,
you should/must include your own Promise
polyfill.
When using node 0.11.x or greater, you must use the --harmony-generators
flag or just --harmony
to get access to generators.
When using node 0.10.x and lower or browsers without generator support, you must use gnode and/or regenerator.
io.js is supported out of the box, you can use co
without flags or polyfills.
$ npm install co
Any library that returns promises work well with co
.
View the wiki for more libraries.
var co = ; ; ; // errors can be try/catched ; { // log any uncaught errors // co will not throw any errors you do not handle!!! // HANDLE ALL YOUR ERRORS!!! console;}
The yieldable
objects currently supported are:
Nested yieldable
objects are supported, meaning you can nest
promises within objects within arrays, and so on!
Thunks are functions that only have a single argument, a callback.
Thunk support only remains for backwards compatibility and may
be removed in future versions of co
.
yield
ing an array will resolve all the yieldables
in parallel.
;
Just like arrays, objects resolve all yieldable
s in parallel.
;
Any generator or generator function you can pass into co
can be yielded as well. This should generally be avoided
as we should be moving towards spec-compliant Promise
s instead.
Returns a promise that resolves a generator, generator function, or any function that returns a generator.
;
Convert a generator into a regular function that returns a Promise
.
var fn = co; ;
MIT