An open standard for sound, interoperable JavaScript promises—by implementers, for implementers.
A promise represents the eventual result of an asynchronous operation. The primary way of interacting with a promise is through its then
method, which registers callbacks to receive either a promise's eventual value or the reason why the promise cannot be fulfilled.
This specification details the behavior of the then
method, providing an interoperable base which all Promises/A+ conformant promise implementations can be depended on to provide. As such, the specification should be considered very stable. Although the Promises/A+ organization may occasionally revise this specification with minor backward-compatible changes to address newly-discovered corner cases, we will integrate large or backward-incompatible changes only after careful consideration, discussion, and testing.
Historically, Promises/A+ clarifies the behavioral clauses of the earlier Promises/A proposal, extending it to cover de facto behaviors and omitting parts that are underspecified or problematic.
Finally, the core Promises/A+ specification does not deal with how to create, fulfill, or reject promises, choosing instead to focus on providing an interoperable then
method. Future work in companion specifications may touch on these subjects.
- "promise" is an object or function with a
then
method whose behavior conforms to this specification. - "thenable" is an object or function that defines a
then
method. - "value" is any legal JavaScript value (including
undefined
, a thenable, or a promise). - "exception" is a value that is thrown using the
throw
statement. - "reason" is a value that indicates why a promise was rejected.
A promise must be in one of three states: pending, fulfilled, or rejected.
- When pending, a promise:
- may transition to either the fulfilled or rejected state.
- When fulfilled, a promise:
- must not transition to any other state.
- must have a value, which must not change.
- When rejected, a promise:
- must not transition to any other state.
- must have a reason, which must not change.
Here, "must not change" means immutable identity (i.e. ===
), but does not imply deep immutability.
A promise must provide a then
method to access its current or eventual value or reason.
A promise's then
method accepts two arguments:
promise.then(onFulfilled, onRejected)
-
Both
onFulfilled
andonRejected
are optional arguments:- If
onFulfilled
is not a function, it must be ignored. - If
onRejected
is not a function, it must be ignored.
- If
-
If
onFulfilled
is a function:- it must be called after
promise
is fulfilled, withpromise
's value as its first argument. - it must not be called before
promise
is fulfilled. - it must not be called more than once.
- it must be called after
-
If
onRejected
is a function,- it must be called after
promise
is rejected, withpromise
's reason as its first argument. - it must not be called before
promise
is rejected. - it must not be called more than once.
- it must be called after
-
onFulfilled
oronRejected
must not be called until the execution context stack contains only platform code. [3.1]. -
onFulfilled
andonRejected
must be called as functions (i.e. with nothis
value). [3.2] -
then
may be called multiple times on the same promise.- If/when
promise
is fulfilled, all respectiveonFulfilled
callbacks must execute in the order of their originating calls tothen
. - If/when
promise
is rejected, all respectiveonRejected
callbacks must execute in the order of their originating calls tothen
.
- If/when
-
then
must return a promise [3.3].promise2 = promise1.then(onFulfilled, onRejected);
- If either
onFulfilled
oronRejected
returns a valuex
, run the Promise Resolution Procedure[[Resolve]](promise2, x)
. - If either
onFulfilled
oronRejected
throws an exceptione
,promise2
must be rejected withe
as the reason. - If
onFulfilled
is not a function andpromise1
is fulfilled,promise2
must be fulfilled with the same value aspromise1
. - If
onRejected
is not a function andpromise1
is rejected,promise2
must be rejected with the same reason aspromise1
.
- If either
The promise resolution procedure is an abstract operation taking as input a promise and a value, which we denote as [[Resolve]](promise, x)
. If x
is a thenable, it attempts to make promise
adopt the state of x
, under the assumption that x
behaves at least somewhat like a promise. Otherwise, it fulfills promise
with the value x
.
This treatment of thenables allows promise implementations to interoperate, as long as they expose a Promises/A+-compliant then
method. It also allows Promises/A+ implementations to "assimilate" nonconformant implementations with reasonable then
methods.
To run [[Resolve]](promise, x)
, perform the following steps:
- If
promise
andx
refer to the same object, rejectpromise
with aTypeError
as the reason. - If
x
is a promise, adopt its state [3.4]:- If
x
is pending,promise
must remain pending untilx
is fulfilled or rejected. - If/when
x
is fulfilled, fulfillpromise
with the same value. - If/when
x
is rejected, rejectpromise
with the same reason.
- If
- Otherwise, if
x
is an object or function,- Let
then
bex.then
. [3.5] - If retrieving the property
x.then
results in a thrown exceptione
, rejectpromise
withe
as the reason. - If
then
is a function, call it withx
asthis
, first argumentresolvePromise
, and second argumentrejectPromise
, where:- If/when
resolvePromise
is called with a valuey
, run[[Resolve]](promise, y)
. - If/when
rejectPromise
is called with a reasonr
, rejectpromise
withr
. - If both
resolvePromise
andrejectPromise
are called, or multiple calls to the same argument are made, the first call takes precedence, and any further calls are ignored. - If calling
then
throws an exceptione
,- If
resolvePromise
orrejectPromise
have been called, ignore it. - Otherwise, reject
promise
withe
as the reason.
- If
- If/when
- If
then
is not a function, fulfillpromise
withx
.
- Let
- If
x
is not an object or function, fulfillpromise
withx
.
If a promise is resolved with a thenable that participates in a circular thenable chain, such that the recursive nature of [[Resolve]](promise, thenable)
eventually causes [[Resolve]](promise, thenable)
to be called again, following the above algorithm will lead to infinite recursion. Implementations are encouraged, but not required, to detect such recursion and reject promise
with an informative TypeError
as the reason. [3.6]
-
Here "platform code" means engine, environment, and promise implementation code. In practice, this requirement ensures that
onFulfilled
andonRejected
execute asynchronously, after the event loop turn in whichthen
is called, and with a fresh stack. This can be implemented with either a "macro-task" mechanism such assetTimeout
orsetImmediate
, or with a "micro-task" mechanism such asMutationObserver
orprocess.nextTick
. Since the promise implementation is considered platform code, it may itself contain a task-scheduling queue or "trampoline" in which the handlers are called. -
That is, in strict mode
this
will beundefined
inside of them; in sloppy mode, it will be the global object. -
Implementations may allow
promise2 === promise1
, provided the implementation meets all requirements. Each implementation should document whether it can producepromise2 === promise1
and under what conditions. -
Generally, it will only be known that
x
is a true promise if it comes from the current implementation. This clause allows the use of implementation-specific means to adopt the state of known-conformant promises. -
This procedure of first storing a reference to
x.then
, then testing that reference, and then calling that reference, avoids multiple accesses to thex.then
property. Such precautions are important for ensuring consistency in the face of an accessor property, whose value could change between retrievals. -
Implementations should not set arbitrary limits on the depth of thenable chains, and assume that beyond that arbitrary limit the recursion will be infinite. Only true cycles should lead to a
TypeError
; if an infinite chain of distinct thenables is encountered, recursing forever is the correct behavior.
To the extent possible under law,
the Promises/A+ organization
has waived all copyright and related or neighboring rights to
Promises/A+ Promise Specification.
This work is published from:
United States.