Operations for asynchronous control flow.
var fs = require('fs')
var async = require('control.async')
var read = async.liftNode(fs.readFile)
var files = async.parallel([ read('foo.txt', 'utf-8')
, read('bar.txt', 'utf-8')
, read('baz.txt', 'utf-8')])
var concatenated = files.chain(function(xs){ return xs.join('') })
// Futures are pure, so you need to actually run the action to get
// the effects.
concatenated.fork(
function(error){ throw error }
, function(value){ console.log(value) }
)
The easiest way is to grab it from NPM. If you're running in a Browser environment, you can use Browserify
$ npm install control.async
If you're not using NPM, Download the latest release, and require
the control.async.umd.js
file:
var Async = require('control.async')
Download the latest release, and require the control.async.umd.js
file:
require(['control.async'], function(Async) {
( ... )
})
Download the latest release, and load the control.async.umd.js
file. The properties are exposed in the global Async
object:
<script src="/path/to/control.async.umd.js"></script>
If you want to compile this library from the source, you'll need Git, Make, Node.js, and run the following commands:
$ git clone git://github.com/folktale/control.async.git
$ cd control.async
$ npm install
$ make bundle
This will generate the dist/control.async.umd.js
file, which you can load in
any JavaScript environment.
You can read the documentation online or build it yourself:
$ git clone git://github.com/folktale/control.async.git
$ cd control.async
$ npm install
$ make documentation
Then open the file docs/index.html
in your browser.
This library assumes an ES5 environment, but can be easily supported in ES3 platforms by the use of shims. Just include es5-shim :)
Copyright (c) 2013-2014 Quildreen Motta.
Released under the MIT licence.