d3.js v5 - Promise.all replaced d3.queue

2019-01-15 14:14发布

问题:

I've been using d3.js v4 for sometime now and I've learned that Mike Bostock has replaced the d3.queue in the v5 release with the Promise native JavaScript object. I would like to check with you if this code that I have written is properly queuing (asynchronously) these URL's:

var makeRequest = function() {
    "use strict";

    var bli = [
        "http://stats.oecd.org/sdmx-json/data/BLI2013/all/all",
        "http://stats.oecd.org/sdmx-json/data/BLI2014/all/all",
        "http://stats.oecd.org/sdmx-json/data/BLI2015/all/all",
        "http://stats.oecd.org/sdmx-json/data/BLI2016/all/all",
        "http://stats.oecd.org/sdmx-json/data/BLI/all/all"
    ];

    var promises = [];

    bli.forEach(function(url) {
        promises.push(
            new Promise(function(resolve, reject) {
                d3
                    .json(url)
                    .then(function(response) {
                        resolve(response);
                    })
                    .catch(function(error) {
                        console.log("Error on: " + url + ". Error: " + error);
                        reject(error);
                    });
            })
        );
    });

    Promise.all(promises).then(function(values) {
        console.log(values);
    });
};

makeRequest();

The code seems to function properly, but, is this proper code or is there a better way (a best practice approach) for queuing with Promise.all and d3.js? Is the catch error properly implemented?

回答1:

You can simplify that code a lot: you don't net to use new Promise with d3.json, since d3.json will itself create the promise.

So, you can just do:

var files = ["data1.json", "data2.json", "data3.json"];
var promises = [];

files.forEach(function(url) {
    promises.push(d3.json(url))
});

Promise.all(promises).then(function(values) {
    console.log(values)
});

Or, if you're into the code golf, even shorter:

var files = ["data1.json", "data2.json", "data3.json"];

Promise.all(files.map(url => d3.json(url))).then(function(values) {
    console.log(values)
});

Since I cannot use JSON files in the S.O. snippet, check the console in this bl.ocks: https://bl.ocks.org/GerardoFurtado/f08993c9c729b0b3452ef1803ad9dcbf/c4b45c5acce6033085a667cbb7d34203d15de0f0