问题
I'm having trouble promisifying a braintree method. Specifically, gateway.transaction.sale. https://developers.braintreepayments.com/reference/request/transaction/sale/node
I am using node.js with the bluebird library for promisification.
...
var sale = bluebird.promisify(gateway.transaction.sale);
return sale({
amount: '10.00',
paymentMethodNonce: nonce,
});
})
.then( // doesn't reach here)
.catch(// logs out error)
Specifically, the .catch block at the bottom of the promise chain logs out:
[TypeError: this.create is not a function]
When not attempting to promisify, the code works fine.
gateway.transaction.sale({
amount: '10.00',
paymentMethodNonce: nonce,
}, function(err, result) {
... no errors, everything works fine
}
Is this a problem with how the braintree library is implemented? Am I promisifying wrong? Are there any alternative promisification strategies I can try so I can avoid callback hell?
回答1:
You're missing the context parameter, aka this
. If you're using bluebird v2, do this:
var sale = bluebird.promisify(gateway.transaction.sale, gateway.transaction);
If you use version 3, do this:
var sale = bluebird.promisify(gateway.transaction.sale, {context: gateway.transaction});
You can see this in Bluebird's docs.
回答2:
You can promisify most of the braintree methods like this:
var G = {};
for(var k1 in gateway){
if(gateway.hasOwnProperty(k1) && typeof gateway[k1] === 'object'){
G[k1] = G[k1] || {};
for(var k2 in gateway[k1]){
if(typeof gateway[k1][k2] === 'function'){
console.log('Promisify:', k1, k2);
G[k1][k2] = G[k1][k2] || {};
G[k1][k2] = bluebird.promisify(gateway[k1][k2], {context: gateway[k1]});
}
}
}
}
Then you can use them this way:
G.paymentMethod.find('payment_method_token').then(cb_suc).catch(cb_fail);
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/34321458/how-to-promisify-a-braintree-method