This can be done in vanilla JS, but I recommend the async
module, which is the most popular library for handling async code in Node.js. For example, with async.each
:
var async = require('async');
var courseIds = Object.keys(courses);
// Function for handling each course.
function perCourse(courseId, callback) {
var course = courses[courseId];
// do something with each course.
callback();
}
async.each(courseIds, perCourse, function (err) {
// Executed after each course has been processed.
});
If you want to use a result from each iteration, then async.map
is similar, but passes an array of results to the second argument of the callback.
If you prefer vanilla JS, then this will work in place of async.each
:
function each(list, func, callback) {
// Avoid emptying the original list.
var listCopy = list.slice(0);
// Consumes the list an element at a time from the left.
// If you are concerned with overhead in using the shift
// you can accomplish the same with an iterator.
function doOne(err) {
if (err) {
return callback(err);
}
if (listCopy.length === 0) {
return callback();
}
var thisElem = listCopy.shift();
func(thisElem, doOne);
}
doOne();
}
(taken from a gist I wrote a while back)
I strongly suggest that you use the async library however. Async is fiddly to write, and functions like async.auto
are brilliant.
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