π Fetching data
Learning Objectives
So far we have displayed film data stored in our JavaScript code. But real applications fetch data from servers over the internet. We can restate our problem as follows:
Given an API that serves film data When the page first loads Then the page should
fetch
and display the list of film data, including the film title, times and film certificate
π» Client side and π Server side APIs
We will use fetch()
, a
APIs are useful because they let us get information which we don’t ourselves know. The information may change over time, and we don’t need to update our application. When we ask for the information, the API will tell us the latest version.
We also don’t need to know how the API works in order to use it. It may be written in a different programming language. It may talk to other APIs we don’t know about. All we need to know is how to talk to it. This is called the interface.
Using fetch is simple. But we want to understand what is happening more completely. So let’s take ourselves on a journey through time.
ππΎ Unfurl to see the journey (we will explain this in little pieces)
π΅βπ« This is a lot to take in. Let’s break it down and make sense of it.
Youtube: Step-through-prep workshop π
ποΈ Latency
Learning Objectives
Instead of already having our data, we are now sending a request over the network to another computer, and then waiting for that computer to send us a response back. Now that our data is going on a journey over a network, we introduce the problem of latency.
Latency is the time taken for a request to traverse the network.
π‘ Network latency is travel time.
Why is latency a problem? Because it means we need to wait for our data. But our program can only do one thing at a time - if we stopped our program to wait for data, then we wouldn’t be able to do anything else. We need to handle this time problem.
Programming often involves time problems, and latency is just one of them.
β³ Asynchrony : outside time
Learning Objectives
We can handle latency using
We have written a lot of JavaScript programs that execute sequentially. This means that each line of code is run in order, one after the other.
For example:
console.log("first");
console.log("second");
console.log("third");
Outputs:
first
second
third
When we call a function, the function will run to completion before the next line of code is executed. But what if we need to wait for something to happen? What if we need to wait for our data to arrive before we can show it? In this case, we can use asynchronous execution.
Event Loop
We have already used asynchronous execution. We have defined eventListener
s that listen for events to happen, then execute a callback function. But here’s a new idea: eventListeners are part of the Event API. They are not part of JavaScript! π€― This means you can’t use them in a Node REPL, but they are implemented in web browsers. The core of JavaScript is the same everywhere, but different contexts may add extra APIs.
When you set an eventListener you are really sending a call to a Web API and asking it do something for you.
const search = document.getElementById("search");
search.addEventListener("input", handleInput);
The callback handleInput
cannot run until the user types. With fetch
, the callback function cannot run until the data arrives. In both cases, we are waiting for something to happen before we can run our code.
We use a function as a way of wrapping up the code that needs to be run later on. This means we can tell the browser what to do when we’re done waiting.
ππ½ Visualise the Event Loop
π§ Recap our concept map
πͺ Callbacks
Learning Objectives
Consider this visualisation of an asynchronous program:
ππ½ Code running out of order and off the thread
When we call setTimeout
we send a function call to a client side Web API. The code isn’t executing in our single thread any more, so we can run the next line. The countdown is happening, but it’s not happening in our thread.
When the time runs out, our Web API sends a message to our program to let us know. This is called an
π‘ tip
With a pen and paper, draw a diagram of your mental model of the event loop.
Use your model to predict the order of logged numbers in the following code snippet:
setTimeout(function timeout() {
console.log("1");
}, 2000);
setTimeout(function timeout() {
console.log("2");
}, 500);
setTimeout(function timeout() {
console.log("3");
}, 0);
Did yours look different? There are many ways to visualise the event loop. Work on building your own mental model that helps you predict how code will run.
π Requesting from a server side API
Learning Objectives
So now we have these pieces of our giant concept map
- π€ we know that we can send a request using
fetch()
- π we know that
fetch
is a π» client side π§° Web API - ποΈ we know that sending π€ requests over a network takes time
- 𧡠we know that we should not stop our program to wait for data
- πͺ we know that we can use callbacks to manage events
But we still donβt know how to use fetch
to get data from a server side API. Letβs find this out now. In our filterFilms code, replace the films array with data fetched from a server.
// Begin with an empty state
const state = {
films: [],
};
// Data
const endpoint = "//curriculum.codeyourfuture.io/dummy-apis/films.json";
const fetchFilms = async () => {
const response = await fetch(endpoint);
return await response.json();
}; // our async function returns a Promise
fetchFilms().then((films) => {
render(filmContainer, films); // when
});
π fetch
returns a π«±πΏβπ«²π½ βPromise
; the π«±πΏβπ«²π½ Promise
fulfils itself with a π₯ response; the response contains our πΎ data.
We will dig into this syntax: Promises
, async
, await
, and then
in our next sprint and complete our concept map.
π«±πΏβπ«²π½ Promises
Learning Objectives
To get data from a server, we make a request with fetch
. We act on what comes back: the response. But what happens in the middle? We already know that JavaScript is single-threaded: it can only do one thing at a time.
So do we just stop and wait? No! We have a special object to handle this time problem. Run this code in your Node REPL:
const url = "https://api.github.com/users/SallyMcGrath"; // try your own username
const response = fetch(url);
console.log(response);
Your Promise should look like this:
Promise {
Response {
[Symbol(realm)]: null,
[Symbol(state)]: {
aborted: false,
rangeRequested: false,
timingAllowPassed: true,
requestIncludesCredentials: true,
type: 'default',
status: 200,
timingInfo: [Object],
cacheState: '',
statusText: 'OK',
headersList: [HeadersList],
urlList: [Array],
body: [Object]
},
[Symbol(headers)]: HeadersList {
cookies: null,
[Symbol(headers map)]: [Map],
[Symbol(headers map sorted)]: null
}
},
[Symbol(async_id_symbol)]: 54,
[Symbol(trigger_async_id_symbol)]: 30
}
The response
in this code is not labelling the data. It’s labelling a Promise
.
A promise is exactly what it sounds like: a promise to do something. You can use this promise object to sequence your code. You can say, “When the data comes back, then
do this.”
You will explore Promises in more detail as you build more complex applications. For now, let’s move on to .then()
.
πͺ .then()
Learning Objectives
.then()
is a method that belongs to the Promise
then
is a method available on any Promise.
- given a request to
fetch
some data - when the
response
comes back / the promise resolves to a response object then
do this next thing with the data / execute this callback
The .then()
method takes in a callback function that will run once the promise resolves.
For example:
const url = "https://api.github.com/users/SallyMcGrath";
const callback = (response) => response.json(); // .json() is an instance method that exists for all Response objects.
fetch(url).then(callback);
We can also inline the callback
variable here - this code does exactly the same as the code above:
const url = "https://api.github.com/users/SallyMcGrath";
fetch(url).then((response) => response.json());
It’s a similar idea as the event loop we have already investigated, but this time we can control it clearly. The .then()
method queues up callback functions to execute in sequence once the asynchronous operation completes successfully. This allows us to write code as if it was happening in time order.
π‘ tip
then()
method of a Promise
always returns a new Promise
.We can chain multiple .then()
calls to run more logic, passing the resolved value to the next callback in the chain. This allows us to handle the asynchronous response in distinct steps. Let’s create a getProfile function which we can try out in our Node REPL:
const getProfile = (url) => {
return fetch(url)
.then((response) => response.json()) // This callback consumes the response and parses it as JSON into an object.
.then((data) => data.html_url) // This callback takes the object and gets one property of it.
.then((htmlUrl) => console.log(htmlUrl)); // This callback logs that property.
};
getProfile("https://api.github.com/users/SallyMcGrath");
So then
returns a new Promise
, and you can call then
again on the new object. You can chain Promises in ever more complex dependent steps. This is called Promise chaining.
It’s important to understand some of what is happening with Promises and then
. But for the most part, you will not be writing code in this style.
π¬ async/await
Learning Objectives
Async/await is
await
inside an async
function or at the top level of a module.
We use the async
keyword to define a function that returns a Promise. An async function always returns a Promise.
We can see this with a simple function which doesn’t need to await anything:
const getProfile = async (url) => url;
console.log(getProfile("hello")); // Logs a Promise.
getProfile("hello").then((value) => console.log(value)); // Logs a value
Even though the function above doesn’t have a time problem, the fact that we define the function as an async
function means it returns a Promise
.
But let’s do something more interesting - let’s actually solve a time problem.
const getProfile = async (url) => {
// the async keyword tells us this function handles a time problem
};
We use the await
operator to wait for a Promise to resolve. This allows us to write code that looks like it’s happening in time order, but doesn’t block our main thread.
const getProfile = async (url) => {
const response = await fetch(url);
return response.json();
};
Go ahead and call this in your Node REPL in your terminal: getProfile("https://api.github.com/users/SallyMcGrath").then(console.log)
. It works the same as before.
π« Handling errors
When we use await
, we are saying, “Wait for this Promise to resolve before moving on to the next line of code.” But if the Promise doesn’t resolve, the next line of code will never run and an error will be thrown.
Let’s try this. Call getProfile
with a url that doesn’t exist: getProfile("invalid_url");
You will get a curious response:
Uncaught (in promise) TypeError...
getProfile("invalid_url")
Promise {
<pending>,
[...]
}
> Uncaught [TypeError: Failed to parse URL from invalid_url] {
[cause]: TypeError: Invalid URL
[...] {
code: 'ERR_INVALID_URL',
input: 'invalid_url'
}
}
Some lines redacted […] for clarity.
JavaScript is telling us we need to catch
the error, but how, and why?
π₯ try/catch
Learning Objectives
We can handle errors with a try/catch block. We can use the try
keyword to try to do something, and if it fails, catch
the
throw
keyword.
const getProfile = async (url) => {
try {
const response = await fetch(url);
return response.json();
} catch (error) {
console.error(error);
}
};
Let’s trigger an error to see this in action. In a Node REPL in your terminal, call getProfile on an API that does not exist again:
getProfile("invalid_url");
TypeError: Failed to parse URL from invalid_url
[...]
[cause]: TypeError: Invalid URL
[...]
code: 'ERR_INVALID_URL',
input: 'invalid_url'
It’s actually the same error you saw before, without the word ‘Uncaught’ before it. But why do we care about this? It’s not obvious in this simple, single function. If we don’t catch the error, the function will
You need to tell JavaScript what to do when something goes wrong, or it will give up completely. In fact, in synchronous programming, the entire program would crash. In asynchronous programming, only the function that threw the error will crash. The rest of the program will continue to run.
π‘ tip
π ποΈ fetch films
Learning Objectives
Now that we have a basic understanding of Web APIs and Promises, let’s use our knowledge to get some data from an API. There’s a list of films stored in a JSON file in this directory. We’ll use fetch
to get the data from this API and then render it to the page.
π― Success criterion: You have a working app that fetches data from an API and renders it to the page.
π§ Think back to your filterFilms project.
- Find your completed code. You’re going to iterate on this code to fetch the films from the API instead of using the data in the file.
- Update the state to start with an empty array. We can’t work with films we haven’t fetched yet!
const state = {
films: [],
};
Make a new
getFilms
function to usefetch
to get the data from the API. The URL is//curriculum.codeyourfuture.io/js3/blocks/fetch-films/data.json
Use:
fetch
to get the dataasync
/await
to make sure the function waits for the fetch to complete before trying to get the json data from the responseresponse.json()
to get the data from the response- a
try...catch
block to handle any errors that might occur
const getFilms = async () => {
try {
const response = await fetch(
"//curriculum.codeyourfuture.io/js3/blocks/fetch-films/data.json"
);
return await response.json();
} catch (error) {
console.error(error);
return [];
}
};
We’ve added a try...catch
block to handle any errors that might occur. We’ve also added await
to the fetch
and response.json()
calls. This means that the function will sensibly wait for the fetch
to complete before trying to get the json data from the response.
In our last implementation, we called the render function straight away. This time, we need to wait for the films to be fetched before we can render them. Write a new async function to initialise our app. Try to write it yourself first, then check your understanding below.
Your init
function should look something like this:
init
function should look something like this:// Initial render, which is distinct from the render function as it loads our films into memory from the API.
// Subsequent render calls do not need to call the API to get the films - we already know the films and can remember them.
async function init() {
try {
const films = await getFilms();
state.films = films;
render(filmContainer, films);
} catch (error) {
console.error(error);
}
}
The name init
is a convention. It has no special meaning in the JavaScript language.
π Finally!
And let’s now call this function at the end of our script.
init();