This depends more on how you're going to use them, doesn't it?
If your code looks like:
var imageLoading = loadImage(url); // returns promise
imageLoading.done(showImage);
// imageLoading.done
// imageLoading.error
// imageLoading.then
// imageLoading.success
// imageLoading.fail
// ... whatever your library supports
Then, I might suggest naming the promise something like a present-tense verb...
BUT if you're building a library which depends on deferred objects
// accepts a promise
var showImage = function (promise) {
promise.done(function (img) { /* ...... */ });
};
Then there's nothing particularly wrong with naming the variable as a noun, so long as there's an understanding as to which methods take promises and which don't.
var image = loadImage(url); // returns promise
showImage(image); // acts on promise
Now your interfaces are really clean, and you can write code which looks 100% procedural.
...buuuut, you need to know which functions/methods use promises and which use objects.
If you are passing promises as callbacks, inside of object methods, then you can happily name them promise
or tweetLoading
or dataParsing
or whatever makes sense within the context of that particular situation.
For the definition of showImage
, the parameter I chose is flat-out called promise
, so that if you're doing work on that function, or you needed to debug a chain of stuff, you could see the second you looked at it that it took a promise object.