I am trying to handle a Promise in Javascript, and as a beginner I find the shorthand arrow functions a bit hard to read. So for now I like to expand it to be function(){ } rather than ()=>.
When handling a Promise, the following does not work:
defineAsyncComponent(()=>{
      return import('@ckeditor/ckeditor5-vue/dist/ckeditor.js').then( function(module) {
        module.component
      }).catch(function(error) {
        console.log(error)
      })
    })
However if I change it to use arror functions then it does work:
defineAsyncComponent(()=>{
      return import('@ckeditor/ckeditor5-vue/dist/ckeditor.js').then((module) => module.component).catch((error) => console.log(error))
    })
What on earth is the difference between to the two to cause the first one not to work entirely?
 
     
    