# Promise Polyfill [![travis][travis-image]][travis-url] [travis-image]: https://img.shields.io/travis/taylorhakes/promise-polyfill.svg?style=flat [travis-url]: https://travis-ci.org/taylorhakes/promise-polyfill Lightweight ES6 Promise polyfill for the browser and node. Adheres closely to the spec. It is a perfect polyfill IE or any other browser that does not support native promises. For API information about Promises, please check out this article [HTML5Rocks article](http://www.html5rocks.com/en/tutorials/es6/promises/). It is extremely lightweight. **_< 1kb Gzipped_** ## Browser Support IE8+, Chrome, Firefox, IOS 4+, Safari 5+, Opera ### NPM Use ``` npm install promise-polyfill --save-exact ``` ### Bower Use ``` bower install promise-polyfill ``` ### CDN Polyfill Use This will set a global Promise object if the browser doesn't already have `window.Promise`. ```html ``` ## Downloads * [Promise](https://raw.github.com/taylorhakes/promise-polyfill/master/dist/polyfill.js) * [Promise-min](https://raw.github.com/taylorhakes/promise-polyfill/master/dist/polyfill.min.js) ## Simple use If you would like to add a global Promise object (Node or Browser) if native Promise doesn't exist (polyfill Promise). Use the method below. This is useful it you are building a website and want to support older browsers. Javascript library authors should _NOT_ use this method. ```js import 'promise-polyfill/src/polyfill'; ``` If you would like to not affect the global environment (sometimes known as a [ponyfill](https://github.com/sindresorhus/ponyfill), you can import the base module. This is nice for library authors or people working in environment where you don't want to affect the global environment. ```js import Promise from 'promise-polyfill'; ``` If using `require` with Webpack 2+ (rare), you need to specify the default import ```js var Promise = require('promise-polyfill').default; ``` then you can use like normal Promises ```js var prom = new Promise(function(resolve, reject) { // do a thing, possibly async, then… if (/* everything turned out fine */) { resolve("Stuff worked!"); } else { reject(new Error("It broke")); } }); prom.then(function(result) { // Do something when async done }); ``` ## Performance By default promise-polyfill uses `setImmediate`, but falls back to `setTimeout` for executing asynchronously. If a browser does not support `setImmediate` (IE/Edge are the only browsers with setImmediate), you may see performance issues. Use a `setImmediate` polyfill to fix this issue. [setAsap](https://github.com/taylorhakes/setAsap) or [setImmediate](https://github.com/YuzuJS/setImmediate) work well. If you polyfill `window.setImmediate` or use `Promise._immediateFn = yourImmediateFn` it will be used instead of `window.setTimeout` ``` npm install setasap --save ``` ```js import Promise from 'promise-polyfill/src/polyfill'; import setAsap from 'setasap'; Promise._immediateFn = setAsap; ``` ## Unhandled Rejections promise-polyfill will warn you about possibly unhandled rejections. It will show a console warning if a Promise is rejected, but no `.catch` is used. You can change this behavior by doing. -**NOTE: This only works on promise-polyfill Promises. Native Promises do not support this function** ```js Promise._unhandledRejectionFn = ; ``` If you would like to disable unhandled rejection messages. Use a noop like below. ```js Promise._unhandledRejectionFn = function(rejectError) {}; ``` ## Testing ``` npm install npm test ``` ## License MIT