Book Image

Hands-On Reactive Programming with Python

By : Romain Picard
Book Image

Hands-On Reactive Programming with Python

By: Romain Picard

Overview of this book

Reactive programming is central to many concurrent systems, but it’s famous for its steep learning curve, which makes most developers feel like they're hitting a wall. With this book, you will get to grips with reactive programming by steadily exploring various concepts This hands-on guide gets you started with Reactive Programming (RP) in Python. You will learn abouta the principles and benefits of using RP, which can be leveraged to build powerful concurrent applications. As you progress through the chapters, you will be introduced to the paradigm of Functional and Reactive Programming (FaRP), observables and observers, and concurrency and parallelism. The book will then take you through the implementation of an audio transcoding server and introduce you to a library that helps in the writing of FaRP code. You will understand how to use third-party services and dynamically reconfigure an application. By the end of the book, you will also have learned how to deploy and scale your applications with Docker and Traefik and explore the significant potential behind the reactive streams concept, and you'll have got to grips with a comprehensive set of best practices.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)

Operators used in this application

Now, the structure of the application is ready. Before going into its implementation, some more operators will be described here, four new operators that will be used in the application:

  • The skip operator
  • The filter operator
  • The flat_map operator
  • The let operator

The skip operator

The skip operator omits the first n items emitted by the input observable and emits all other items of the input observable on the output observable. The following figure shows the workings of this operator:

Figure 6.4: The skip operator

The prototype of this operator is the following one:

Observable.skip(self, count)

The count parameter is the number of items to skip before emitting some items.

Here is an example...