Book Image

Reactive Programming with Swift 4

By : Navdeep Singh
Book Image

Reactive Programming with Swift 4

By: Navdeep Singh

Overview of this book

RxSwift belongs to a large family of Rx implementations in different programming languages that share almost identical syntax and semantics. Reactive approach will help you to write clean, cohesive, resilient, scalable, and maintainable code with highly configurable behavior. This book will introduce you to the world of reactive programming, primarily focusing on mobile platforms. It will tell how you can benefit from using RxSwift in your projects, existing or new. Further on, the book will demonstrate the unbelievable ease of configuring asynchronous behavior and other aspects of the app that are traditionally considered to be hard to implement and maintain. It will explain what Rx is made of, and how to switch to reactive way of thinking to get the most out of it. Also, test production code using RxTest and the red/ green approach. Finally, the book will dive into real-world recipes and show you how to build a real-world app by applying the reactive paradigm. By the end of the book, you’ll be able to build a reactive swift application by leveraging all the concepts this book takes you through.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
Free Chapter
1
Migrating from Swift 3 to Swift 4
2
FRP Fundamentals, Terminology, and Basic Building Blocks
3
Set up RxSwift and Convert a Basic Login App to its RxSwift Counterpart
8
RxTest and Custom Rx Extensions – Testing with Rx
10
Schedule Your Tasks, Don't Queue!
11
Subscribe to Errors and Save Your App
12
Functional and Reactive App-Architecture

Networking in RxSwift

We can't do much in an app these days without interacting with a remote server. RxSwift offers useful extensions for working with the URLSession API, and there are some excellent community networking libraries available for RxSwift, including RxAlamOfFire and Moya. Both utilize AlamOfire under the hood actually, and they make writing networking code as enjoyable as it should be. We will go through a pretty standard example for this chapter so that it is easy for you to relate to.

We will create a type ahead search app of GitHub repositories for GitHub user ID.

Project setup

We will start out in a single view app with a tableView. Open up the starter project for this chapter, and you will see that...