One of the most important things in our web apps UX is to provide a form of feedback when the app needs more time to process the user's action when e.g an ajax request is fired in the background. This is usually done using a progress bar, a spinner, or a combination of both.
Have you ever noticed though a "flaky" behavior when a lot of API calls happen at the same time?
We can provide a smooth experience to our users, so let's fix that!
What we'll build
We'll create a simple loader handler function for Promises
that will make sure our loading indicator will disappear only when the last unresolved Promise
gets resolved. We'll also make sure that the function is reusable so that it can be used with any project and with any progress loading indicator plugin.
Implementation
createLoader.ts
export const createLoader = (options: {
start: () => void;
end: () => void;
inc?: () => void;
slackTime?: number;
}) => {
const promises: Promise<unknown>[] = [];
const opts = {
...{
inc: () => {},
slackTime: 0,
},
...options,
};
const load = <T>(promise: Promise<T> | (() => Promise<T>)) => {
const p = typeof promise === 'function' ? promise() : promise;
!promises.length && opts.start();
promises.push(p);
p.finally(() => {
setTimeout(() => {
promises.pop();
!promises.length ? opts.end() : opts.inc();
}, opts.slackTime);
});
return p;
};
return { load };
};
We created a factory function that takes an options object as a parameter. The options object defines which operations will be performed on loading start/end and optionally an operation to execute when a Promise
is resolved.
We can also define a slackTime
that will be used as a delay to wait until the last Promise
is resolved. This is useful in cases that we have e.g an API call that starts shortly after another call has just finished, causing a "flickering" effect in our loader.
The factory function will return our load
method which will accept a Promise
or a function that returns a Promise
. Instead of firing our async
functions directly, we'll pass them through our load
function instead. Our loader then will make sure that the loading progress ends when the last of the Promises
is resolved.
Options
Option | Description | Type | Default |
---|---|---|---|
start |
A function to execute on loading start, this is where we start our progress loader | function |
undefined |
end |
A function to execute when loading ends, this is where we stop our progress loader | function |
undefined |
inc |
An optional function to execute when a promise resolves (valid for all promises except the last one). We can use this function to increment our loading progress. | function |
() => {} |
slackTime |
Time in ms to wait until last promise is resolved as to enable multiple operations in a sequence without re-triggering a loader progress start |
Number |
0 |
Creating our loader
It's time to create our loader. Here we're using the popular nprogress library for our progress loading indicator as an example.
loader.ts
import NProgress from 'nprogress';
import { createLoader } from './createLoader';
NProgress.configure({
minimum: 0.35,
speed: 300,
});
const start = () => {
NProgress.start();
};
const end = () => {
NProgress.done();
};
const inc = () => {
NProgress.inc(0.05);
};
const loader = createLoader({ start, end, slackTime: 350, inc });
export const { load } = loader;
We have configured the NProgress
instance and setup a new loader that will start, end, or increment the nprogress
progress bar depending on the Promises
' state.
How to use
Using our loader is fairly simple, we just need to pass our Promises
into the load
function and our loader will take care of the rest. Here's an example using axios
that dispatches two requests so that they get registered in our loader.
import { load } from './loader';
import axios from 'axios';
const res1 = load(axios.get(`https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/todos`));
const res2 = load(axios.get(`https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/todos/1`));
That's it, no more loading progress flicker!
If you want to see how this feels in a browser, checkout a live example of the loader that implements a global page progress bar (and some extra stuff too) in this stackblitz here
Make sure you open this with a Chromium-based browser (e.g Chrome) and run npm run dev
on the console.
Update:
promise-loading-handler is now an npm package. You can include it in your JS project with npm install promise-loading-handler
Thanks for reading.
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