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Reactive Programming for .NET Developers

Reactive Programming for .NET Developers

By : Antonio Esposito, Ciceri
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Reactive Programming for .NET Developers

Reactive Programming for .NET Developers

4 (2)
By: Antonio Esposito, Ciceri

Overview of this book

Reactive programming is an innovative programming paradigm focused on time-based problem solving. It makes your programs better-performing, easier to scale, and more reliable. Want to create fast-running applications to handle complex logics and huge datasets for financial and big-data challenges? Then you have picked up the right book! Starting with the principles of reactive programming and unveiling the power of the pull-programming world, this book is your one-stop solution to get a deep practical understanding of reactive programming techniques. You will gradually learn all about reactive extensions, programming, testing, and debugging observable sequence, and integrating events from CLR data-at-rest or events. Finally, you will dive into advanced techniques such as manipulating time in data-flow, customizing operators and providers, and exploring functional reactive programming. By the end of the book, you'll know how to apply reactive programming to solve complex problems and build efficient programs with reactive user interfaces.
Table of Contents (10 chapters)
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IObservable interface

The IObservable interface, the opposite of the IObserver interface, has the task of handling message production and the observer subscription. It routes right messages to the OnNext message handler and errors to the OnError message handler. As its life cycle ends, it acknowledges all the observers on the OnComplete message handler.

To create a valid reactive observable interface, we must write something that is not locking against user input or any other external system input data. The observable object acts as an infinite message generator, something like an infinite enumerable of messages; although in such cases, there is no enumeration.

Once a new message is available somehow, observer routes it to all the subscribers.

In the following example, we will try creating a console application to ask the user for an integer number and then route such a number to all the subscribers. Otherwise, if the given input is not a number, an error will be routed to all the subscribers...

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