If your code is that deeply nested, surely something has gone horribly wrong, yes?

☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆
creator
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151Y

Problem is that Js kind of encourages this being single threaded and using callbacks for anything blocking. To be fair, the new async syntax sugar helps in modern Js, but nesting a bunch of callbacks or promises was basically the way you did stuff for the longest time.

Yes and no. Any programming language encourages nesting as in the end the computer does nest your code. So it is only normal and predictable that languages would reflect that. BUT! Nest logic can often be inverted and by doing so, reduce how much nesting you need to do.

If (data is not null) {
    If (data has field x) {
         Return data x
    } else return null
} else return null

Can be

If (data is null) return null
If (data hasn't field x) return null
Return data x
☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆
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11Y

I’m not arguing that avoiding deep nesting is a good idea, or that techniques foe doing that don’t exist. I’m just pointing out that Js style programming naturally leads you to nesting things because of the nature of callbacks. Notice how your example isn’t using callbacks.

Yeah and you can void nesting there just as easily and you have the same issues in any other programming language. You just need to create functions. Also JavaScript is not single threaded… you only have access to the dom on one thread, for obvious reasons.

Please explain to me how you do e.g. file downloads without a callback in your favorite language. If you solution involves having the main thread being stuck in a while loop, I am not sure if your complain about nested code can be taken seriously.

☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆
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-61Y

Sure, you end up passing higher order functions around, and my point is that complexity obviously goes up. There’s a reason callback hell is a well known thing in Js land. Meanwhile, Js is single threaded from user perspective. The fact that there is a background rendering thread in client side js is completely tangential to the discussion.

Finally, the problem with callbacks is generally seen in server-side Js runtimes. A great example is if you have an HTTP handler that needs to get data from a db. In a language with user accessible threads you just make a db operation synchronously and return the result. In Js, you have to do a callback. The reason you can do the operation synchronously when you have threads is due to the fact that HTTP handler thread can accept a request and then dispatch a new thread to handle it while waiting for other requests.

It is not really tangential to the discussion. You claimed it is because Js single threaded. Also it is not single threaded from the “users” perspective if you mean the developer. There are workers.

If your issue is asynchronous function calls, just call synchronous functions. You might be stuck in a while loop somewhere but if you prefer that, use it. There are sync functions for everything in Js and/or you can easily create them yourself.

☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆
creator
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-61Y

Js is single threaded from user perspective. You have no access to the threading runtime as a user and cannot spawn a thread in Js to do some background work. Workers are a recent addition, but using them is quite different from what I’m talking about.

And being stuck in a while loop is precisely why people have to use callbacks and why all the APIs are async. This is literally the problem. If you’re dealing with any non trivial load, you are forced to use async mechanics.

And what is the alternative? How do you handle any non trivial load in any other language? Without a second thread or while loop. Because apparently you dislike both. You like it sync for your database -> while loop somewhere, but while loops are bad. But asynchronous is bad because it adds complexity to your code when you use functions to reduce the nesting.

On nodejs, the platform that you talked about earlier, they are literally called worker_threads". So they are different? How? Why can’t you use them?

@Blackmist@feddit.uk
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51Y

I prefer a bunch of

if (fucked_up) {return(error_code);}

for checking common errors.

Yup, never nest.

All the conditions should be checked and returned if they failed as you go through the function with the successful response being the last line.

haruki
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101Y

Code aesthetic: If your code looks like a triangle, you’re seriously doing something wrong.

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