The Promise.all(iterable)
method returns a single Promise
that resolves when all of the promises in the iterable
argument have resolved or when the iterable argument contains no promises. It rejects with the reason of the first promise that rejects.
Promise.all(iterable);
Promise
if the iterable passed is empty.Promise
if the iterable passed contains no promises. Note, Google Chrome 58 returns an already resolved promise in this case.Promise
in all other cases. This returned promise is then resolved/rejected asynchronously (as soon as the stack is empty) when all the promises in the given iterable have resolved, or if any of the promises reject. See the example about "Asynchronicity or synchronicity of Promise.all" below. Returned values will be in order of the Promises passed, regardless of completion order.This method can be useful for aggregating the results of multiple promises.
Fulfillment:
If an empty iterable is passed, then this method returns (synchronously) an already resolved promise.
If all of the passed-in promises fulfill, or are not promises, the promise returned by Promise.all
is fulfilled asynchronously.
In all cases, the returned promise is fulfilled with an array containing all the values of the iterable passed as argument (also non-promise values).
Rejection:
If any of the passed-in promises reject, Promise.all
asynchronously rejects with the value of the promise that rejected, whether or not the other promises have resolved.
Promise.all
Promise.all
waits for all fulfillments (or the first rejection).
var p1 = Promise.resolve(3); var p2 = 1337; var p3 = new Promise((resolve, reject) => { setTimeout(resolve, 100, 'foo'); }); Promise.all([p1, p2, p3]).then(values => { console.log(values); // [3, 1337, "foo"] });
If the iterable contains non-promise values, they will be ignored, but still counted in the returned promise array value (if the promise is fulfilled):
// this will be counted as if the iterable passed is empty, so it gets fulfilled var p = Promise.all([1,2,3]); // this will be counted as if the iterable passed contains only the resolved promise with value "444", so it gets fulfilled var p2 = Promise.all([1,2,3, Promise.resolve(444)]); // this will be counted as if the iterable passed contains only the rejected promise with value "555", so it gets rejected var p3 = Promise.all([1,2,3, Promise.reject(555)]); // using setTimeout we can execute code after the stack is empty setTimeout(function(){ console.log(p); console.log(p2); console.log(p3); }); // logs // Promise { <state>: "fulfilled", <value>: Array[3] } // Promise { <state>: "fulfilled", <value>: Array[4] } // Promise { <state>: "rejected", <reason>: 555 }
Promise.all
This following example demonstrates the asynchronicity (or synchronicity, if the iterable passed is empty) of Promise.all
:
// we are passing as argument an array of promises that are already resolved, // to trigger Promise.all as soon as possible var resolvedPromisesArray = [Promise.resolve(33), Promise.resolve(44)]; var p = Promise.all(resolvedPromisesArray); // immediately logging the value of p console.log(p); // using setTimeout we can execute code after the stack is empty setTimeout(function(){ console.log('the stack is now empty'); console.log(p); }); // logs, in order: // Promise { <state>: "pending" } // the stack is now empty // Promise { <state>: "fulfilled", <value>: Array[2] }
The same thing happens if Promise.all
rejects:
var mixedPromisesArray = [Promise.resolve(33), Promise.reject(44)]; var p = Promise.all(mixedPromisesArray); console.log(p); setTimeout(function(){ console.log('the stack is now empty'); console.log(p); }); // logs // Promise { <state>: "pending" } // the stack is now empty // Promise { <state>: "rejected", <reason>: 44 }
But, Promise.all
resolves synchronously if and only if the iterable passed is empty:
var p = Promise.all([]); // will be immediately resolved var p2 = Promise.all([1337, "hi"]); // non-promise values will be ignored, but the evaluation will be done asynchronously console.log(p); console.log(p2) setTimeout(function(){ console.log('the stack is now empty'); console.log(p2); }); // logs // Promise { <state>: "fulfilled", <value>: Array[0] } // Promise { <state>: "pending" } // the stack is now empty // Promise { <state>: "fulfilled", <value>: Array[2] }
Promise.all
fail-fast behaviourPromise.all
is rejected if any of the elements are rejected. For example, if you pass in four promises that resolve after a timeout and one promise that rejects immediately, then Promise.all
will reject immediately.
var p1 = new Promise((resolve, reject) => { setTimeout(resolve, 1000, 'one'); }); var p2 = new Promise((resolve, reject) => { setTimeout(resolve, 2000, 'two'); }); var p3 = new Promise((resolve, reject) => { setTimeout(resolve, 3000, 'three'); }); var p4 = new Promise((resolve, reject) => { setTimeout(resolve, 4000, 'four'); }); var p5 = new Promise((resolve, reject) => { reject('reject'); }); Promise.all([p1, p2, p3, p4, p5]).then(values => { console.log(values); }, reason => { console.log(reason) }); //From console: //"reject" //You can also use .catch Promise.all([p1, p2, p3, p4, p5]).then(values => { console.log(values); }).catch(reason => { console.log(reason) }); //From console: //"reject"
Specification | Status | Comment |
---|---|---|
ECMAScript 2015 (6th Edition, ECMA-262) The definition of 'Promise.all' in that specification. | Standard | Initial definition in an ECMA standard. |
ECMAScript Latest Draft (ECMA-262) The definition of 'Promise.all' in that specification. | Draft |
Feature | Chrome | Edge | Firefox | Internet Explorer | Opera | Safari |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Basic support | 32 | Yes | 29 | No | 19 | 8 |
Feature | Android webview | Chrome for Android | Edge mobile | Firefox for Android | Opera Android | iOS Safari | Samsung Internet |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Basic support | 4.4.4 | 32 | Yes | 29 | Yes | 8 | ? |
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https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Promise/all