Gopinath
Apr 12, 2026
Code reviews can feel brutal when you're new. Here's how to approach them with confidence and actually learn from the feedback.
Most tutorials throw you into syntax before you understand the problem being solved. That's like learning to drive by memorizing the gear positions before you've ever sat in a car. Let's fix that.
The real question isn't "how does this syntax work?" — it's "what problem does this solve, and why did we need a new solution?"
Think of your JavaScript program as a restaurant kitchen. The chef (your main thread) can only do one thing at a time. When an order comes in that takes a long time — say, a slow database query — you don't want the chef to just stand there waiting.
// The old way — callback hell
fetchUser(userId, function(user) {
fetchPosts(user.id, function(posts) {
fetchComments(posts[0].id, function(comments) {
// You're now three levels deep 😅
console.log(comments);
});
});
});
// The async/await way — reads like normal code
async function loadData(userId) {
const user = await fetchUser(userId);
const posts = await fetchPosts(user.id);
const comments = await fetchComments(posts[0].id);
console.log(comments); // Clean!
}Pro tip
If you find yourself writing .then().then().then(), that's a sign you should switch to async/await. Your future self will thank you.
Async/await isn't magic — it's just a cleaner way to write Promise-based code. Once that clicks, the syntax becomes obvious. Start with the mental model, then the syntax will follow naturally.
Got questions? Drop a comment below — I read every single one.
Got a question, a thought, or something to add? I'd love to hear it.