Book Image

Learning RxJava - Second Edition

By : Nick Samoylov, Thomas Nield
Book Image

Learning RxJava - Second Edition

By: Nick Samoylov, Thomas Nield

Overview of this book

RxJava is not just a popular library for building asynchronous and event-based applications; it also enables you to create a cleaner and more readable code base. In this book, you’ll cover the core fundamentals of reactive programming and learn how to design and implement reactive libraries and applications. Learning RxJava will help you understand how reactive programming works and guide you in writing your first example in reactive code. You’ll get to grips with the workings of Observable and Subscriber, and see how they are used in different contexts using real-world use cases. The book will also take you through multicasting and caching to help prevent redundant work with multiple Observers. You’ll then learn how to create your own RxJava operators by reusing reactive logic. As you advance, you’ll explore effective tools and libraries to test and debug RxJava code. Finally, you’ll delve into RxAndroid extensions and use Kotlin features to streamline your Android apps. By the end of this book, you'll become proficient in writing reactive code in Java and Kotlin to build concurrent applications, including Android applications.
Table of Contents (22 chapters)
1
Section 1: Foundations of Reactive Programming in Java
5
Section 2: Reactive Operators
12
Section 3: Integration of RxJava applications
Appendix B: Functional Types
Appendix E: Understanding Schedulers

Blocking subscribers

Remember how sometimes, we have to stop the main thread from racing past an Observable or Flowable that operates on a different thread and keep it from exiting the application before it has a chance to fire? We often prevented this using Thread.sleep(), especially when we used Observable.interval(), subscribeOn(), or observeOn(). The following code shows how we did this typically and kept an Observable.interval() application alive for 6 seconds (just a second longer than the number of emitted intervals):

import io.reactivex.rxjava3.core.Observable;
import org.junit.Test;
import java.util.concurrent.TimeUnit;

public class Ch10_01 {
@Test
public void demoCode() {
Observable.interval(1, TimeUnit.SECONDS)
.take(5)
.subscribe(System.out::println);
sleep(6000);
}
public static void sleep(int millis) {
...