This method returns a promise that will be fulfilled with the same value as the `input` promise and after at least `msec` milliseconds. If the `input` promise is rejected, the `output` promise is immediately rejected with the same reason.
This `handler` allows to observe the value of the `input` promise, without changing the propagated value. The `output` promise will be resolved with the same value as the `input` promise (the `handler` returned value will be ignored). However, if `handler` throws, `output` is rejected with the new exception. Unlike `finally`, this handler is not called for rejections.
Make sure that the chained value is not copied when `finally` is called for a fulfilled input promise. The value was copied 7 times in the previous version because it was captured in a lambda, which one copied multiple times.
When dispatching the promise result, we need to clear both handlers and catchers to prevent retaining circular references when the promise is captured into the handler and/or catcher. Also refactor part of the `notify` logic.
Make QPromise thread safe but also ensure that continuation lambdas (then/fail/finally) are called in the thread of the promise instance they are attached to.
Make continuation methods const (then/fail/finally) and ensure that the resolved promise value/error is copied only when required, same for user lambdas (dispatching result is now fully handled by the PromiseData).
QFuture canceled with `QFuture::cancel()` now rejects attached promises with `QPromiseCanceledException`. In case the future is canceled because an exception (e) has been thrown, the promise is rejected with the same (e) exception (or `QUnhandledException` if not a subclass of `QException`).
Make sure that the promise state can only be changed by the promise producer (and not consumers) by removing the `fulfill` and `reject` methods from the instance members and introducing a new constructor accepting a resolver lambda. That also means that a promise can't anymore be default constructed.
Add the static `QPromise<T>::resolve` and `QPromise<T>::reject` methods to create synchronously fulfilled or rejected promises, and fix the `qPromise` helper to handle deduced promises (e.g. `qPromise(QFuture<int>()) -> QPromise<int>`).