A multi-platform ReactiveX implementation targetting JVM, iOS, Android, and JS.
More targets can be added upon request.
Please refer to https://reactivex.io for documentation.
The reactivex documentation covers much of the functionality. If there are any significant discrepancies, excluding those illuminated within this documentation, please post an issue.
- Observable
- Single - Similar to observable, but will complete when the first value is emitted.
- BehaviorRelay - Subject which ignores all notifications. Relays retain and emit the latest element.
- BehaviorSubject - Similar to the BehaviorRelay, but acknowledges notifications
- PublishSubject
- More coming, new collaborators / contributions are greatly appreciated.
More operators are coming quickly, but not all have been implemented.
Currently supported operators:
- map
- filter
- flatMap
- switchMap (non-interleaving variant of FlatMap)
- combineLatest
- onErrorReturn
- toSingle
- first
Single(just = "hello")
.map { "$it world" }
.subscribe(NextObserver { result ->
// result => "hello world"
})
/* Be sure to dispose when this is no longer needed to prevent leaks. */
val disposable = Observable<String>(createWithEmitter = { emitter ->
emitter.next("we're happy")
emitter.next("la la la")
Disposables.create {
/*
* This block is called when this cold observable loses all of its observers or
* a notification is received. Use this to clean up any open connections, etc.
*/
}
}).flatMap { happyText ->
/* Use the text to maybe fetch something from an api. */
return@flatMap Single<String>(error = UnauthorizedException()) // Uh oh, expired access
.onErrorReturn { throwable ->
/* Handle throwable, maybe check for unauthorized and recover */
return@onErrorReturn Single(just = "$happyText recovery")
}
}.subscribe(NextTerminalObserver({ emission ->
/*
* emission => "we're happy recovery"
* emission => "la la la recovery"
*/
}, { throwable ->
/* No terminal notifications in this example */
}))
Please ensure you're using gradle 5.3+.
Installing has recently become significantly easier. Now it's as simple as including the following:
kotlin {
sourceSets {
val commonMain by getting {
dependencies {
api("com.noheltcj:rxcommon:0.6.1")
}
}
}
}
kotlin {
sourceSets {
commonMain {
dependencies {
api 'com.noheltcj:rxcommon:0.6.1'
}
}
}
}
Since native modules require dependencies to be compiled with the same kotlin version, we will be keeping up with this support map going forward.
0.4.2 -> 1.3.20
0.5.0 -> 1.3.21
0.5.1 -> 1.3.21
0.5.2 -> 1.3.30
0.5.3 -> 1.3.31
0.6.0 -> 1.3.50
0.6.1 -> 1.3.61
Objective-c only has partial generics support, so we lose a bit of information when this library is imported as a framework in XCode.
To help with this, when you produce an Objective-C framework, be sure to enable generics support.
components.main {
outputKinds("framework")
extraOpts "-Xobjc-generics"
}
This library doesn't support concurrency. In the majority of cases, concurrency is a side effect that can be handled on the platform. If you are doing anything that requires a significant amount of time to operate, it's important to do this work off the main thread (Especially if your application has a user interface). Of course do that using other resources such as RxSwift, RxJava, or basic platform concurrency frameworks, but ensure you've returned to the main thread before re-entering the common code.