To be a valid asyncIterator, your test function must return an object with a next method that returns a promise of a result object with value and done properties. (Technically, value is optional if its value would be undefined and done is optional if its value would be false, but...)
You can do that in a few ways:
- Completely manually (awkward, particularly if you want the right prototype)
- Half-manually (slightly less awkward, but still awkward to get the right prototype)
- Using an async generator function (simplest)
You can do it completely manually (this doesn't try to get the right prototype):
function test() {
let i = -1;
return {
next() {
++i;
if (i >= 10) {
return Promise.resolve({
value: undefined,
done: true
});
}
return Promise.resolve({
value: i > 5 ? `Greater than 5: (${i})` : `Less than 5: (${i})`,
done: false
});
}
};
}
let a = {
[Symbol.asyncIterator]: test
};
async function main() {
for await (let x of a) {
console.log(x)
}
}
main()
.then(r => console.log(r))
.catch(err => console.log(err))
You can do it half-manually writing a function that returns an object with an async next method (still doesn't try to get the right prototype):
function test() {
let i = -1;
return {
async next() {
++i;
if (i >= 10) {
return {
value: undefined,
done: true
};
}
return {
value: i > 5 ? `Greater than 5: (${i})` : `Less than 5: (${i})`,
done: false
};
}
};
}
let a = {
[Symbol.asyncIterator]: test
};
async function main() {
for await (let x of a) {
console.log(x)
}
}
main()
.then(r => console.log(r))
.catch(err => console.log(err))
Or you can just use an async generator function (easiest, and automatically gets the right prototype):
async function* test() {
for (let i = 0; i < 10; ++i) {
yield i > 5 ? `Greater than 5: (${i})` : `Less than 5: (${i})`;
}
}
let a = {
[Symbol.asyncIterator]: test
};
async function main() {
for await (let x of a) {
console.log(x)
}
}
main()
.then(r => console.log(r))
.catch(err => console.log(err))
About prototypes: All async iterators you get from the JavaScript runtime itself inherit from a prototype that provides the very basic feature of ensuring the iterator is also iterable (by having Symbol.iterator be a function returning this). There's no publicly-available identifer or property for that prototype, you have to jump through hoops to get it:
const asyncIteratorPrototype =
Object.getPrototypeOf(
Object.getPrototypeOf(
async function*(){}.prototype
)
);
Then you'd use that as the prototype of the object with the next method that you're returning:
return Object.assign(Object.create(asyncIteratorPrototype), {
next() {
// ...
}
});