As of April 12th, you must go to Progress SupportLink to create new support cases or to access existing cases. Please, bookmark the SupportLink URL and use the new portal to contact the support team.
This worked for me! Thank you so much!
Hi Albert,
Indeed the TypeScript definitions are wrongly set that the lookup method returns a Promise when it would return an observable. I have logged this as a bug - thank you for reporting this.
As a workaround, you may cast the method as returning an observable or any like this:
var subscription = (Kinvey.User.lookup(query) as any).toPromise(); subscription .then((user: Kinvey.User) => { console.log('here', JSON.stringify(user)); }) .catch(err => { console.log('err', JSON.stringify(err)); });
or like this:
const subscription =(Kinvey.User.lookup(query) as any) .subscribe((user: Kinvey.User) => { console.log('here', JSON.stringify(user)); });
Let me know if this has helped.
My project is very simple. I am using NativeScript with Angular 2 and TypeScript.
Now I can see in the node_modules \ kinvey-nativescript-sdk \ kinvey.d.ts that line of code:
When I change Promise<{}> to Observable<{}>, the error does not show, but how can I get the users output?
Hi Albert,
I tried to reproduce the described behavior but without any success. The User.lookup() method will return an observable, not a promise as stated in the documentation and as you can see in the source code here: https://github.com/Kinvey/js-sdk/blob/master/src/core/user/userstore.js#L62.
Could you please send a sample project you are testing with in order to replicate the issue?
Regards
Martin Apostolov
Алберт Василев
I have searched a lot on Google, but nothing ... I think that there is a mistake with the code, which is describing the User Discovery section here: https://devcenter.kinvey.com/angular/guides/users#lookup
When I try to execute Kinvey.User.lookup(query).subscribe method, I get this error:
Property 'subscribe' does not exist ont type 'Promise<{}>'
Any ideas how to fix this error so I can get users data?