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My implementation of debounce axios request left the promise in pending state forever, is there a better way?

I need a simple debounce function with immediate always true.
Without resorting to lodash and with the help of Can someone explain the "debounce" function in Javascript , I implemented it as following,

function debounce(func, wait) {
    var timeout;
    return function() {
        if (!timeout) func.apply(this, arguments);
        clearTimeout(timeout);
        timeout = setTimeout(()=>{timeout = null}, wait);
    };
};

It works as expected until I need to debounce axios request. Assumed I have a debounced axios method, I would like the calling method to be as usual, which means my debounced axios method should return promise I believe.

   //the calling method should not change   
   debounced_axios().then(res => {...}).catch(err => {...}) 

The essence of original debounce implementation is to just run func once in a wait timeframe, but how do I just return one promise in a wait timeframe ?

Then I came up with the following solution

all_timers = {}
function debounce_axios(input, wait) {
    return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
        let timer = all_timers.[input] //check if it is a repeated request, pseudo code
        if (!timer) {
            axios(input).then(res=>{
                resolve(res)
            }).catch(err => {
                reject(err)
            })
        }
        clearTimeout(timer);
        timer = setTimeout(()=>{timer = null}, wait);
        all_timers[input] = timer
    };
};

So the essence of my debounce_axios is to let the promise stay in pending state for the repeated request.Then the calling method debounced_axios().then(res => {...}).catch(err => {...}) does not need to change.

The answer here Are JavaScript forever-pending promises bad? said "There should be no side effect."

But I am still not 100% sure about letting a promise stay in pending forever.

The other question is that Promise Anti patterns suggested not creating unnecessary promise. But in my case creating a new promise seems necessary.

In a nutshell is there a simple to way to debounce axios request (or any request returns promise) ?

like image 275
Qiulang 邱朗 Avatar asked Apr 30 '19 11:04

Qiulang 邱朗


2 Answers

But I am still not 100% sure about letting a promise stay in pending forever.

I agree that it's not a good idea. A better approach would be to move the entire promise chain inside the debounced function.

Another option would be to return a cached value when the debounced call does not trigger a new request. This would solve your problem that you always need to return a promise:

function debounce(func, wait) {
    var timeout, value;
    return function() {
        if (!timeout) value = func.apply(this, arguments);
        clearTimeout(timeout);
        timeout = setTimeout(() => {
            timeout = value = null;
        }, wait);
        return value;
    };
}

Of course that would mean that in some cases, multiple then handlers will be called when your request finishes. It depends on your application whether that is a problem or just superfluous work.

The other question is that Promise Anti patterns suggested not creating unnecessary promise. But in my case creating a new promise seems necessary.

Only one promise is necessary: when you create the never-resolved one. You can write that as

function debounce(func, wait) {
    var timeout;
    const never = new Promise(resolve => {/* do nothing*/});
    return function() {
        const result = timeout ? never : func.apply(this, arguments);
        clearTimeout(timeout);
        timeout = setTimeout(() => {
            timeout = null;
        }, wait);
        return result;
    };
}

Or at least avoid the .then(resolve).catch(reject) part. Better write

function debounce(func, wait) {
    var timeout;
    return function() {
        return new Promise(resolve => {
            if (!timeout) resolve(func.apply(this, arguments));
//                        ^^^^^^^
            clearTimeout(timeout);
            timeout = setTimeout(() => {
                timeout = null;
            }, wait);
        });
    };
}

And should you consider to reject the promise in case that the timeout has not yet occurred (so that the calling code can handle the rejection), you don't need new Promise either:

function debounce(func, wait) {
    var timeout;
    return function() {
        const result = timeout
          ? Promise.reject(new Error("called during debounce period"))
          : Promise.resolve(func.apply(this, arguments));
        clearTimeout(timeout);
        timeout = setTimeout(() => {
            timeout = null;
        }, wait);
        return result;
    };
}
like image 157
Bergi Avatar answered Oct 09 '22 04:10

Bergi


In essence, you need to share result of your debounce function. In your case, thats a promise:

const debouncedGetData = debounce(getData, 500)
let promiseCount = 0
let resultCount = 0
test()

function test() {
  console.log('start')
  callDebouncedThreeTimes()
  setTimeout(callDebouncedThreeTimes, 200)
  setTimeout(callDebouncedThreeTimes, 900)
}

function callDebouncedThreeTimes () {
   for (let i=0; i<3; i++) {
      debouncedGetData().then(r => {
        console.log('Result count:', ++resultCount)
        console.log('r', r)
      })
   }
}

function debounce(func, wait) {
    let waiting;
    let sharedResult;
    return function() {
        // first call will create the promise|value here
        if (!waiting) {
          setTimeout(clearWait, wait)
          waiting = true
          sharedResult = func.apply(this, arguments);
        }
        // else new calls within waitTime will be discarded but shared the result from first call

        function clearWait() {
          waiting = null
          sharedResult = null
        }

        return sharedResult
    };
}

function getData () {
  console.log('Promise count:', ++promiseCount)
  return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
    setTimeout(() => {
       resolve(666)
    }, 1000)
  })
}
like image 20
Doğancan Arabacı Avatar answered Oct 09 '22 02:10

Doğancan Arabacı