Best way to wait for .forEach() to complete

JavascriptAngularjs

Javascript Problem Overview


Sometimes I need to wait for a .forEach() method to finish, mostly on 'loader' functions. This is the way I do that:

$q.when(array.forEach(function(item){ 
    //iterate on something 
})).then(function(){ 
    //continue with processing 
});

I can't help but feel that this isn't the best way to wait for a .forEach() to finish. What is the best way to do this?

Javascript Solutions


Solution 1 - Javascript

If there is no asynchronous code inside the forEach, forEach is not asynchronous, for example in this code:

array.forEach(function(item){ 
    //iterate on something 
});
alert("Foreach DONE !");

you will see the alert after forEach finished.

Otherwise (You have something asynchronous inside), you can wrap the forEach loop in a Promise:

var bar = new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
    foo.forEach((value, index, array) => {
        console.log(value);
        if (index === array.length -1) resolve();
    });
});

bar.then(() => {
    console.log('All done!');
});

Credit: @rolando-benjamin-vaz-ferreira

Solution 2 - Javascript

The quickest way to make this work using ES6 would be just to use a for..of loop.

const myAsyncLoopFunction = async (array) => {
  const allAsyncResults = []

  for (const item of array) {
    const asyncResult = await asyncFunction(item)
    allAsyncResults.push(asyncResult)
  }

  return allAsyncResults
}

Or you could loop over all these async requests in parallel using Promise.all() like this:

const myAsyncLoopFunction = async (array) => {
  const promises = array.map(asyncFunction)
  await Promise.all(promises)
  console.log(`All async tasks complete!`)
}

Solution 3 - Javascript

var foo = [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10];

If you're actually doing async stuff inside the loop, you can wrap it in a promise ...

var bar = new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
	foo.forEach((value, index, array) => {
		console.log(value);
		if (index === array.length -1) resolve();
	});
});

bar.then(() => {
	console.log('All done!');
});

Solution 4 - Javascript

If you have an async task inside a loop and you want to wait. you can use for await

for await (const i of images) {
    let img = await uploadDoc(i);
};

let x = 10; //this executes after

Solution 5 - Javascript

forEach() doesn't return anything, so a better practice would be map() + Promise.all()

var arr = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]

var doublify = (ele) => {
  return new Promise((res, rej) => {
    setTimeout(() => {
        res(ele * 2)
    }, Math.random() ); // Math.random returns a random number from 0~1
  })
}

var promises = arr.map(async (ele) => {
  // do some operation on ele
  // ex: var result = await some_async_function_that_return_a_promise(ele)
  // In the below I use doublify() to be such an async function

  var result = await doublify(ele)
  return new Promise((res, rej) => {res(result)})
})

Promise.all(promises)
.then((results) => {
  // do what you want on the results
  console.log(results)
})

output

Solution 6 - Javascript

Use for of instead of forEach. Like this:

for (const item of array) {
  //do something
}
console.log("finished");

"finished" will be logged after finishing the loop.

Solution 7 - Javascript

A universal solution for making sure that all forEach() elements finished execution.

const testArray = [1,2,3,4]
let count = 0

await new Promise( (resolve) => {
  testArray.forEach( (num) => {
    try {
      //some real logic
      num = num * 2
    } catch (e) {
      // error handling
      console.log(e)
    } fanally {
      // most important is here
      count += 1
      if (count == testArray.length) {
        resolve()
      }
    }
  })  
})

The idea is same with the answer using index to count. But in real case, if error happened, the index way cannot count correctly. So the solution is more robust.

Thx

Solution 8 - Javascript

Alter and check a counter at the end of every possible unique branch of code, including callbacks. Example:

const fs = require('fs');

/**
 * @description Delete files older than 1 day
 * @param {String} directory - The directory to purge
 * @return {Promise}
 */
async function purgeFiles(directory) {
  const maxAge = 24*3600000;
  const now = Date.now();
  const cutoff = now-maxAge;

  let filesPurged = 0;
  let filesProcessed = 0;
  let purgedSize = 0;

  await new Promise( (resolve, reject) => {
    fs.readdir(directory, (err, files) => {
      if (err) {
        return reject(err);
      }
      if (!files.length) {
        return resolve();
      }
      files.forEach( file => {
        const path = `${directory}/${file}`;
        fs.stat(path, (err, stats)=> {
          if (err) {
            console.log(err);
            if (++filesProcessed === files.length) resolve();
          }
          else if (stats.isFile() && stats.birthtimeMs < cutoff) {
            const ageSeconds = parseInt((now-stats.birthtimeMs)/1000);
            fs.unlink(path, error => {
              if (error) {
                console.log(`Deleting file failed: ${path} ${error}`);
              }
              else {
                ++filesPurged;
                purgedSize += stats.size;
                console.log(`Deleted file with age ${ageSeconds} seconds: ${path}`);
              }
              if (++filesProcessed === files.length) resolve();
            });
          }
          else if (++filesProcessed === files.length) resolve();
        });
      });
    });
  });

  console.log(JSON.stringify({
    directory,
    filesProcessed,
    filesPurged,
    purgedSize,
  }));
}

// !!DANGER!! Change this line! (intentional syntax error in ,')
const directory = ,'/tmp'; // !!DANGER!! Changeme
purgeFiles(directory).catch(error=>console.log(error));

Solution 9 - Javascript

const array = [1, 2, 3];
const results = [];
let done = 0;

const asyncFunction = (item, callback) =>
  setTimeout(() => callback(item * 10), 100 - item * 10);

new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
  array.forEach((item) => {
    asyncFunction(item, (result) => {
      results.push(result);
      done++;
      if (done === array.length) resolve();
    });
  });
}).then(() => {
  console.log(results); // [30, 20, 10]
});

// or
// promise = new Promise(...);
// ...
// promise.then(...);

The order of results in the "results" array can be different than the order of items in the original array, depending on the time when the asyncFunction() finishes for each of the items.

Solution 10 - Javascript

I'm not sure of the efficiency of this version compared to others, but I used this recently when I had an asynchronous function inside of my forEach(). It does not use promises, mapping, or for-of loops:

// n'th triangular number recursion (aka factorial addition)
function triangularNumber(n) {
    if (n <= 1) {
        return n
    } else {
        return n + triangularNumber(n-1)
    }
}

// Example function that waits for each forEach() iteraction to complete
function testFunction() {
    // Example array with values 0 to USER_INPUT
    var USER_INPUT = 100;
    var EXAMPLE_ARRAY = Array.apply(null, {length: USER_INPUT}).map(Number.call, Number) // [ 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, n_final... ] where n_final = USER_INPUT-1

    // Actual function used with whatever actual array you have
    var arrayLength = EXAMPLE_ARRAY.length
    var countMax = triangularNumber(arrayLength);
    var counter = 0;
    EXAMPLE_ARRAY.forEach(function(entry, index) {
        console.log(index+1); // show index for example (which can sometimes return asynchrounous results)

        counter += 1;
        if (triangularNumber(counter) == countMax) {

            // function called after forEach() is complete here
            completionFunction();
        } else {
            // example just to print counting values when max not reached
            // else would typically be excluded
            console.log("Counter index: "+counter);
            console.log("Count value: "+triangularNumber(counter));
            console.log("Count max: "+countMax);
        }
    });
}
testFunction();

function completionFunction() {
    console.log("COUNT MAX REACHED");
}

Solution 11 - Javascript

I had to deal with the same problem (forEach using multiple promises inside) and none of the solutions presented at the current date were helpful for me. So I implemented a check array, were each promise updates its complete status. We have a general promise that wraps the process. We only resolve the general promise when each promise completed. Snippet code:

function WaitForEachToResolve(fields){

    var checked_fields = new Array(fields.length).fill(0);
    const reducer = (accumulator, currentValue) => accumulator + currentValue;
        
    return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {

      Object.keys(fields).forEach((key, index, array) => {

        SomeAsyncFunc(key)
        .then((result) => {
        
            // some result post process
        
            checked_fields[index] = 1;
            if (checked_fields.reduce(reducer) === checked_fields.length)
                resolve();
        })
        .catch((err) => {
            reject(err);
        });
      }
    )}
}

Solution 12 - Javascript

I like to use async-await instead of .then() syntax so for asynchronous processing of data, modified the answer of @Ronaldo this way -

let finalData = [];
var bar = new Promise(resolve => {
    foo.forEach((value, index) => {
        const dataToGet = await abcService.getXyzData(value);
        finalData[index].someKey = dataToGet.thatOtherKey;
        // any other processing here
        if (finalData[dataToGet.length - 1].someKey) resolve();
    });
});

await Promise.all([bar]);
console.log(`finalData: ${finalData}`);

NOTE: I've modified the if condition where it resolves the promise to meet my conditions. You can do the same in your case.

Solution 13 - Javascript

You can use this, because we are using async/await inside the forEach loop. You can use your own logic inside the loop.

    let bar = new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
        snapshot.forEach(async (doc) => {
            """Write your own custom logic and can use async/await
            """
            const result = await something()
            resolve(result);
        });
    });
    let test = []
    test.push(bar)
    let concepts = await Promise.all(test);
    console.log(concepts);

Solution 14 - Javascript

For simple compare code i like use for statement.

doit();
function doit() {

		for (var i = 0; i < $('span').length;  i++) {
			console.log(i,$('span').eq(i).text() );
			if ( $('span').eq(i).text() == "Share a link to this question"  ) { //  span number 59
				return;
			}
		}

alert('never execute');

}

Solution 15 - Javascript

I've been using this and it works best .forEach()

//count
var expecting = myArray.length;

myArray.forEach(function(item){

//do logic here
var item = item



//when iteration done
if (--expecting === 0) {

console.log('all done!');

}

})

Attributions

All content for this solution is sourced from the original question on Stackoverflow.

The content on this page is licensed under the Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-SA 4.0) license.

Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
QuestionJaap WeijlandView Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - JavascriptIsmail RBOUHView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - JavascriptDouglas RosebankView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - JavascriptRolando Benjamin Vaz FerreiraView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 4 - JavascriptPJ3View Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 5 - Javascript林冠宇View Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 6 - JavascriptAqeelView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 7 - JavascriptWei TangView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 8 - JavascriptTerrisView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 9 - JavascriptVladimir KruzikView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 10 - JavascriptAbout7DeathsView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 11 - JavascriptFederico CacciaView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 12 - JavascriptitsHarshadView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 13 - JavascriptVishal SinhaView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 14 - Javascriptuser956584View Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 15 - JavascriptGroguView Answer on Stackoverflow