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Start your free trialBrendan Whiting
Front End Web Development Techdegree Graduate 84,738 PointsShould we be returning a Promise?
I'm finding that my tests aren't running consistently with the code as is. I refactored to return the Promise from the async
methods and it seems to work better. Am I crazy? If something calls an async
method that doesn't return anything, and calls await
on it, what happens?
Original (pages/scroll.js):
open() {
this.driver.get(url);
}
async loadContent() {
var loader = await this.driver.findElement(this.locators.loader);
await this.driver.executeScript("arguments[0].scrollIntoView();", loader);
await this.driver.wait(until.elementLocated(By.css('#loader:not(.active)')));
}
Refactored (pages/scroll.js):
open() {
return this.driver.get(url); // now with `return`
}
async loadContent() {
var loader = await this.driver.findElement(this.locators.loader);
await this.driver.executeScript("arguments[0].scrollIntoView();", loader);
return this.driver.wait(until.elementLocated(By.css('#loader:not(.active)'))); // now with `return`
}
Here's the code where these methods get called (test/scroll.js):
before(async function() {
driver = await env.builder().build();
page = new ScrollPage(driver);
await page.open(); // if page.open() doesn't return anything, what is it awaiting?
});
it('adds more boxes', async function() {
let boxes = await driver.findElements(page.locators.boxes);
let oldBoxCount = boxes.length;
await page.loadContent(); // if page.loadContent() doesn't return anything, what is it awaiting?
boxes = await driver.findElements(page.locators.boxes);
let newBoxCount = boxes.length;
assert(newBoxCount > oldBoxCount);
});
I'm also wondering if the tests are running better now for an unrelated reason, like cacheing.
1 Answer
Steven Parker
231,236 PointsI'd expect an async function to always return a promise, and if not an explicit one, then one that is resolved (as "undefined") when the function ends.
So I don't see a functional difference between these versions, just that in the original version the final test is awaited inside "loadContent", and in the refactor it is awaited in the caller.
Brendan Whiting
Front End Web Development Techdegree Graduate 84,738 PointsBrendan Whiting
Front End Web Development Techdegree Graduate 84,738 PointsOkay cool. I did a little experiment. I expected
waitForHello2
to behave differently thanwaitForHello1
, but it turns out they resolved at the same time. Which is that implicit resolving with undefined as you were saying after the other 'awaits'.