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Add Sleep For A Bit In Async Code as a JavaScript til

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jbranchaud
2021-10-13 10:04:13 -05:00
parent 9d280db682
commit 8a5fc977bc
2 changed files with 36 additions and 1 deletions

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For a steady stream of TILs, [sign up for my newsletter](https://crafty-builder-6996.ck.page/e169c61186).
_1159 TILs and counting..._
_1160 TILs and counting..._
---
@@ -413,6 +413,7 @@ _1159 TILs and counting..._
- [Resolve And Pass Multiple Values From A Then](javascript/resolve-and-pass-multiple-values-from-a-then.md)
- [Running ES6 Specs With Mocha](javascript/running-es6-specs-with-mocha.md)
- [Scoping Variables With A Block Statement](javascript/scoping-variables-with-a-block-statement.md)
- [Sleep For A Bit In Async Code](javascript/sleep-for-a-bit-in-async-code.md)
- [Sorting Arrays Of Objects With Lodash](javascript/sorting-arrays-of-objects-with-lodash.md)
- [Splat Arguments To A Function](javascript/splat-arguments-to-a-function.md)
- [Spread The Rest With ES6](javascript/spread-the-rest-with-es6.md)

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# Sleep For A Bit In Async Code
A `sleep` utility function can be useful in a variety of situations. From
testing and debugging to simulating a delay in development.
Here is what that function can look like in its simplest form:
```javascript
function sleep(time) {
return new Promise((resolve) => {
setTimeout(resolve, time)
})
}
```
This function returns a promise that will resolve after the given number of
milliseconds.
As an example of how to use it, here is how we can simulate a delay in a fake
fetch function.
```javascript
async function fakeUserFetch(userId) {
# add half a second of "network" latency
await sleep(500)
const fakeResponse = {
id: userId,
email: "fake-email@example.com"
}
return Promise.resolve(fakeResponse)
}
```