Asynchronous Programming
Asynchronous Code
Async code allows a program to start a long-running task (like fetching data from a file). and continue with other tasks before the first one finishes.
Async code prevents the application from freezing, which is critical for user experience.
Control Flow
Control Flow is the order in which statements are executed in a program.
By default, JavaScript runs code from top to bottom and left to right.
Async programming can change this.
How JavaScript Runs Code
JavaScript executes code one line at a time.
Each line must finish before the next line runs.
The output is always A B C.
Function Sequence
JavaScript functions are executed in the sequence they are called. Not in the sequence they are defined.
This example will display "Hello Goodbye" because the functions are called in that order:
Example
function myFirst() {
myDisplayer("Hello");
}
function
mySecond() {
myDisplayer("Goodbye");
}
myFirst();
mySecond();
This example will display "Goodbye Hello" because the functions are called in that order:
Example
function myFirst() {
myDisplayer("Hello");
}
function
mySecond() {
myDisplayer("Goodbye");
}
mySecond();
myFirst();
Note
The examples above are normal synchronous flow.
Why Async Code
Some tasks take time to finish (network requests, timers, user input).
To stay responsive, JavaScript can use async programming.
Asynchronous flow refers to how JavaScript allows certain operations to run in the background and let their results be handled when they are ready.
If JavaScript waited for these tasks, the page would freeze.
Asych code lets the rest of the program continue to run.
Async code does not run immediately:
- Timers run after a specified number of milliseconds
- Events run when triggered by an event
- Network requests run when the data arrives
Note
A frozen page is a broken page.
Asynch code does not block execution.
Example
myDisplayer("A");
setTimeout(function() {
myDisplayer("B");
}, 1000);
myDisplayer("C");
Try it Yourself »
Note
The output from the above example is A C B.
Common Beginner Confusion
Example
let result;
setTimeout(function() {
result = 5;
}, 1000);
// What is result here?
Try it Yourself »
Result is undefined because the async code has not finished yet.
Note
Beginners expect async results immediately.
JavaScript Events
Events are actions or occurrences that happen in the browser, often triggered by user interactions (like clicks, keypresses, or form submissions) or by the browser itself (like page loading or resizing).
Asynchronous Consepts
JavaScript handles asynchronus programming using different core consepts.
| Concept | Description |
|---|---|
| Synchronus | The JavaScript standard flow is executing line by line |
| Timers | Allows code to run while other code is waiting |
| Callbacks | Callbacks were the first solution for async JavaScript |
| Events | Stores callback function waiting to be executed |
| Promises | Tools to handle asynchronous operations cleanly |
| Async/Await | The clean and modern way to handle async code |
Asynchronous vs Parallel
Parallel means doing multiple things at the same time on different processors.
Asynchronous means switching between tasks, not necessarily running them simultaneously.
A single-threaded JavaScript engine handles asynchronous tasks by using an event loop to switch between them, rather than utilizing multiple CPU cores. When a task finishes, it signals the main thread (via a callback, promise, or event) to handle the result.
| Feature | Async (Deferred) | Parallel (Simultaneous) |
|---|---|---|
| Goal | Responsiveness (Don't freeze) | Performance (Get it done faster) |
| Execution | Non-blocking (waiting for I/O) | Simultaneous (crunching many numbers) |
| Hardware | Can run on 1 processor | Requires multiple processors |
| Example | Running code while the user scrolls | Processing 10,000 images at once |
In short, asynchronous tells the system:
- Start this task now
- I don't need the result immediately
- Notify me later when it's done
Analogy:
Ordering food at a restaurant.
- Place your order (async call)
- Sit down and do other things while the chef makes it
- The server brings the food (callback)
What You Will Learn
This tutorial will build the understanding of async programming step by step:
- What are Timeouts
- Why callbacks were created
- How promises represent future values.
- Why
asyncandawaitare preferred. - How to debug async code.
Each of these tool was created to solve problems from the previous tool.
Next Chapter
A JavaScript timeout schedules a function to run after a delay in milliseconds.
A timeout is an async operation used to delay code execution without freezing the browser.