Book Image

C++ Reactive Programming

By : Praseed Pai, Peter Abraham
Book Image

C++ Reactive Programming

By: Praseed Pai, Peter Abraham

Overview of this book

Reactive programming is an effective way to build highly responsive applications with an easy-to-maintain code base. This book covers the essential functional reactive concepts that will help you build highly concurrent, event-driven, and asynchronous applications in a simpler and less error-prone way. C++ Reactive Programming begins with a discussion on how event processing was undertaken by different programming systems earlier. After a brisk introduction to modern C++ (C++17), you’ll be taken through language-level concurrency and the lock-free programming model to set the stage for our foray into the Functional Programming model. Following this, you’ll be introduced to RxCpp and its programming model. You’ll be able to gain deep insights into the RxCpp library, which facilitates reactive programming. You’ll learn how to deal with reactive programming using Qt/C++ (for the desktop) and C++ microservices for the Web. By the end of the book, you will be well versed with advanced reactive programming concepts in modern C++ (C++17).
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
Title Page
Copyright and Credits
Packt Upsell
Contributors
Preface
Index

Composing functions together with the pipe operator


The Unix operating system's command line shell allows the standard output of one function to be piped into the another to form a filter chain. Later, this feature became part of every command line shell offered as part of most operating systems. While writing functional style code, when we combine methods through functional composition, the code becomes hard to read because of deep nesting. Now, with Modern C++ we can overload the pipe (|) operator to allow chaining several functions together, like we do commands in a Unix shell or Windows PowerShell console. That is why someone re-christened the LISP language as Lots of Irritating and Silly Parentheses. The RxCpp library uses the | operator extensively to compose functions together. The following code helps us understand how one can create pipeable functions. We will take a look at how this can be implemented in principle. The code given here is only good for expository purposes:

//---...