Book Image

Architecting Angular Applications with Redux, RxJS, and NgRx

Book Image

Architecting Angular Applications with Redux, RxJS, and NgRx

Overview of this book

Managing the state of large-scale web applications is a highly challenging task with the need to align different components, backends, and web workers harmoniously. When it comes to Angular, you can use NgRx, which combines the simplicity of Redux with the reactive programming power of RxJS to build your application architecture, making your code elegant and easy to reason about, debug, and test. In this book, we start by looking at the different ways of architecting Angular applications and some of the patterns that are involved in it. This will be followed by a discussion on one-way data flow, the Flux pattern, and the origin of Redux. The book introduces you to declarative programming or, more precisely, functional programming and talks about its advantages. We then move on to the reactive programming paradigm. Reactive programming is a concept heavily used in Angular and is at the core of NgRx. Later, we look at RxJS, as a library and master it. We thoroughly describe how Redux works and how to implement it from scratch. The two last chapters of the book cover everything NgRx has to offer in terms of core functionality and supporting libraries, including how to build a micro implementation of NgRx. This book will empower you to not only use Redux and NgRx to the fullest, but also feel confident in building your own version, should you need it.
Table of Contents (12 chapters)

Summary

This chapter has established that we can model asynchronous events as values on a time axis. We introduced the idea of comparing these streams to lists and thereby applying functional methods to them that would not change the lists themselves but merely create a new list. The benefit of applying the functional paradigm is that we can focus on what to achieve rather than how to achieve it, thereby having a declarative approach. We realize it's not easy to combine async and lists and create readable code from it. Fortunately, this is what the RxJS library does for us. It is this realization that prepares us for the coming chapter, Chapter 5, RxJS Basics, where we introduce RxJS as a library just that: create order in the async mess while modeling everything as a stream. With RxJS, we can truly focus on what rather than how, as it comes with a bunch of stream manipulation...