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javascript - Why do Promise libraries use event loops?

Considering the following JavaScript code:

var promise = new Promise();
setTimeout(function() {
    promise.resolve();
}, 10);

function foo() { }
promise.then(foo);

In the promise implementations I've seen, promise.resolve() would simply set some property to indicate the promise was resolved and foo() would be called later during an event loop, yet it seems like the promise.resolve() would have enough information to immediately call any deferred functions such as foo().

The event loop method seems like it would add complexity and reduce performance, so why is it used?

While most of my use of promises is with JavaScript, part of the reason for my question is in implementing promises in very performance intensive cases like C++ games, in which case I'm wondering if I could utilize some of the benefits of promises without the overhead of an event loop.

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All promise implementations, at least good ones do that.

This is because mixing synchronicity into an asynchronous API is releasing Zalgo.

The fact promises do not resolve immediately sometimes and defer sometimes means that the API is consistent. Otherwise, you get undefined behavior in the order of execution.

function getFromCache(){
      return Promise.resolve(cachedValue || getFromWebAndCache());
}

getFromCache().then(function(x){
     alert("World");
});
alert("Hello");

The fact promise libraries defer, means that the order of execution of the above block is guaranteed. In broken promise implementations like jQuery, the order changes depending on whether or not the item is fetched from the cache or not. This is dangerous.

Having nondeterministic execution order is very risky and is a common source of bugs. The Promises/A+ specification is throwing you into the pit of success here.


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