evt.waitFor(...)

Method that returns a promise that will resolve when the next matched event is posted.

waitFor is essentially evt.attachOnce(...) but you don’t provide a callback. It accepts the same arguments and return the same promise.

Essentialy the same but not exactly the same, there is a key difference between a handler attached via waitFor and a handler attached with attach* as explained below.

Without timeout

By default the promise returned by waitFor will never reject.

import { Evt } from "evt";

const evtText = Evt.create<string>();

setTimeout(()=> evtText.post("Hi!"), 1500);

(async ()=>{

    //waitFor return a promise that will resolve next time 
    //post() is invoked on evtText.
    const text = await evtText.waitFor();

    console.log(text);

})();

Run the example

With timeout

As with attach*, it is possible to set what is the maximum amount of time we are willing to wait for the event before the promise rejects.

import { Evt, EvtError } from "evt";

const evtText = Evt.create<string>();

(async ()=>{

    try{

        const text = await evtText.waitFor(500);

        console.log(text);

    }catch(error){

        console.assert(error instanceof EvtError.Timeout);
        //Error can be of two type:
        //  -EvtError.Timeout if the timeout delay was reached.
        //  -EvtError.Detached if the handler was detached before 
        //  the promise returned by waitFor have resolved. 

        console.log("TIMEOUT!");

    }

})();

//A random integer between 0 and 1000
const timeout= ~~(Math.random() * 1000);

//There is a fifty-fifty chance "Hi!" is printed else it will be "TIMEOUT!".
setTimeout(
    ()=> evtText.post("Hi!"), 
    timeout
);

Run the example

Difference between evt.waitFor(...) and evt.attachOnce(...)

const pr= evt.waitFor() is NOT equivalent to const pr= evt.attachOnce(()=>{})

evt.waitFor() is designed in a way that makes it safe to use async procedures.

Basically it means that the following example prints A B on the console instead of waiting forever for the secondLetter.

import { Evt } from "evt";

const evtText = Evt.create<string>();

(async ()=>{

    const firstLetter = await evtText.waitFor();
    const secondLetter = await evtText.waitFor();

    console.log(`${firstLetter} ${secondLetter}`);

})();

evtText.post("A");
evtText.post("B");

//"A B" is printed to the console.

Run this more practical example if you want to understand how this behavior prevent from some hard to figure out bugs.

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