Does all async function code will run i a different thread?
No. async
functions, await
, and promises do not create or use different threads.
A promise doesn't make anything asynchronous on its own1, it's just a way of observing the completion of something that's already asynchronous (like your timer callback, which uses the timer subsystem of your environment to call your timer callback later).
async
functions are "just" a way (a really, really useful way) to wait for promises to settle via syntax rather than by attaching fulfillment and rejection handlers using the .then
or .catch
methods.
I was a little surprise that the line console.log(res); was printed before the 10 seconds of timeout was finished, but i guess that the reason is that the code after await doesn't return a Promise.
setTimeout
doesn't return a promise, right. So await
doesn't wait for the timer callback to occur. See this question's answers for how you'd make a promise-enabled version of setTimeout
.
But, why does the code : console.log('bla bla bla'); was printed before both lines:
For the same reason: Your async
function returns a promise, and your code calling your async
function doesn't wait for that promise to be settled before moving on to the console.log('bla bla bla')
line.
Here's code that both uses a promise-enabled version of setTimeout
and waits for your async
function's promise to settle before doing the console.log
:
function delay(ms) {
return new Promise(resolve => setTimeout(resolve, ms));
}
async function imaAsyncFunction () {
let res = await delay(800); // 0.8s instead of 10s
console.log("Timer expired");
console.log(res); // undefined, since we haven't set a fulfillment value
console.log("is after");
}
imaAsyncFunction()
.then(() => {
console.log("bla bla bla");
})
.catch(error => {
console.error(error);
});
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