TLDR: Working example is in the last codeblock of this question. Check out #bryan60 answer for a working example using concat rather than mergeMap.
I'm trying to run a number of remote requests sequentially, but only the first observable is executed.
The number of request vary, so I can't do a dodgy solution where I nest observables within each other.
I'm using the following code:
const observables = [
observable1,
observable2,
...
];
from(observables).pipe(
mergeMap(ob=> {
return ob.pipe(map(res => res));
}, undefined, 1)
).subscribe(res => {
console.log('Huzzah!');
})
In the past (rxjs 5.5) Ive used the following:
let o = Observable.from(observables).mergeMap((ob) => {
return ob;
}, null, 1);
o.subscribe(res => {
console.log('Huzzah!');
})
I'm not sure what I'm doing wrong, can anybody shed some light?
An additional request would be to only print 'Huzzah!' once on completion of all requests rather than for each individual Observable.
EDIT:
Removing undefined from my original code will make it work, however there was another issue causing only the first observable to be executed.
I'm using Angular's HttpClient for remote requests. My observable code looked like this:
const observables = [];
// Only the first observable would be executed
observables.push(this.http.get(urla));
observables.push(this.http.get(urlb));
observables.push(this.http.get(urlc));
Adding .pipe(take(1)) to each observable results in each observable being executed:
const observables = [];
// All observables will now be executed
observables.push(this.http.get(urla).pipe(take(1));
observables.push(this.http.get(urlb).pipe(take(1));
observables.push(this.http.get(urlc).pipe(take(1));
The code I ended up using, which executes all observables in sequential order and only triggers Huzzah! once is:
const observables = [];
observables.push(this.http.get(urla).pipe(take(1));
observables.push(this.http.get(urlb).pipe(take(1));
observables.push(this.http.get(urlc).pipe(take(1));
from(observables).pipe(
mergeMap(ob=> {
return ob.pipe(map(res => res));
}, 1),
reduce((all: any, res: any) => all.concat(res), [])
).subscribe(res => {
console.log('Huzzah!');
})
Thanks to #bryan60 for helping me wit this issue.
if these are http requests that complete, I think your bug is caused by a change to the mergeMap signature that removed the result selector. it's hard to be sure without knowing exactly which version you're on as it was there, then removed, then added again, and they're removing it once more for good in v7.
if you want to run them sequentially... this is all you need...
// concat runs input observables sequentially
concat(...observables).subscribe(res => console.log(res))
if you want to wait till they're all done to emit, do this:
concat(...observables).pipe(
// this will gather all responses and emit them all when they're done
reduce((all, res) => all.concat([res]), [])
// if you don't care about the responses, just use last()
).subscribe(allRes => console.log(allRes))
In my personal utility rxjs lib, I always include a concatJoin operator that combines concat and reduce like this.
the only trick is that concat requires observables to complete till it moves on to the next one, but the same is true for mergeMap with concurrent subscriptions set to 1.. so that should be fine. things like http requests are fine, as they complete naturally after one emission.. websockets or subjects or event emitters will behave a bit differently and have to be manually completed, either with operators like first or take or at the source.
If you are not concerned about the sequence of execution and just want 'Huzzah!' to be printed once all the observable has been executed forkJoin can also be used.Try this.
forkJoin(...observables).subscribe(res => console.log('Huzzah');
Related
I need a specific behavior that I can't get with the RxJS operators. The closest would be to use DebounceTime only for values entered after the first one, but I can't find a way to do it. I have also tried with ThrottleTime but it is not exactly what I am looking for, since it launches intermediate calls, and I only want one at the beginning that is instantaneous, and another at the end, nothing else.
ThrottleTime
throttleTime(12 ticks, { leading: true, trailing: true })
source: --0--1-----2--3----4--5-6---7------------8-------9---------
throttle interval: --[~~~~~~~~~~~I~~~~~~~~~~~I~~~~~~~~~~~I~~~~~~~~~~~]--------
output: --0-----------3-----------6-----------7-----------9--------
source_2: --0--------1------------------2--------------3---4---------
throttle interval: --[~~~~~~~~~~~I~~~~~~~~~~~]---[~~~~~~~~~~~]--[~~~~~~~~~~~I~
output_2: --0-----------1---------------2--------------3-----------4-
DebounceTime
debounceTime(500)
source: --0--1--------3------------4-5-6-7-8-9-10-11--13----------------
debounce_interval: -----[~~~~~]--[~~~~~]--------------------------[~~~~~]----------
output: -----------1--------3--------------------------------13---------
What I want
debounceTimeAfterFirst(500) (?)
source: --0--1--------3------------4-5-6-7-8-9-10-11--13----------------
debounce_interval: -----[~~~~~]--[~~~~~]--------------------------[~~~~~]----------
output: --0--------1--3------------4-------------------------13---------
As you see, the debounce time is activated when a new value is entered. If the debounce time passes and any new value has been entered, it stops the listening the debounceTime action and waits to start a new one.
Edit: I forgot to comment that this must be integrated with NgRx’s Effects, so it must be a continuous stream that mustn't be completed. Terminating it would probably cause it to stop listening for dispatched actions.
I would use a throttle combined with a debounceTime:
throttle: from Documentation Emit value on the leading edge of an interval, but suppress new values until durationSelector has completed.
debounceTime: from Documentation Discard emitted values that take less than the specified time between output.
I would use a throttle stream to get the raising edge (the first emission) and then the debounce stream would give us the falling edge.
const source = fromEvent(document.getElementsByTagName('input'), 'keyup').pipe(
pluck('target', 'value')
);
const debounced = source.pipe(
debounceTime(4000),
map((v) => `[d] ${v}`)
);
const effect = merge(
source.pipe(
throttle((val) => debounced),
map((v) => `[t] ${v}`)
),
debounced
);
effect.subscribe(console.log);
See RxJS StackBlitz with the console open to see the values changing.
I prepared the setup to adapt it to NgRx which you mention. The effect I got working is:
#Injectable({ providedIn: 'root' })
export class FooEffects {
switchLight$ = createEffect(() => {
const source = this.actions$.pipe(
ofType('[App] Switch Light'),
pluck('onOrOff'),
share()
);
const debounced = source.pipe(debounceTime(1000), share());
return merge(source.pipe(throttle((val) => debounced)), debounced).pipe(
map((onOrOff) => SetLightStatus({ onOrOff }))
);
});
constructor(private actions$: Actions) {}
}
See NgRx StackBlitz with the proposed solution working in the context of an Angular NgRx application.
share: This operator prevents the downstream paths to simultaneously fetch the data from all the way up the chain, instead they grab it from the point where you place share.
I also tried to adapt #martin's connect() approach. But I don't know how #martin would "reset" the system so that after a long time if a new source value is emitted would not debounce it just in the same manner as you first run it, #martin, feel free to fork it and tweak it to make it work, I'm curious about your approach, which is very smart. I didn't know about connect().
#avicarpio give it a go on your application and let us know how it goes :)
I think you could do it like the following, even though I can't think of any easier solution right now (I'm assuming you're using RxJS 7+ with connect() operator):
connect(shared$ => shared$.pipe(
exhaustMap(value => merge(
of(value),
shared$.pipe(debounceTime(1000)),
).pipe(
take(2),
)),
)),
Live demo: https://stackblitz.com/edit/rxjs-qwoesj?devtoolsheight=60&file=index.ts
connect() will share the source Observable and lets you reuse it in its project function multiple times. I'm using it only to use the source Observable inside another chain.
exhaustMap() will ignore all next notifications until its inner Observable completes. In this case the inner Observable will immediately reemit the current value (of(value)) and then use debounceTime(). Any subsequent emission from source is ignored by exhaustMap() because the inner Observable hasn't completed yet but is also passed to debounceTime(). Then take(2) is used to complete the chain after debounceTime() emits and the whole process can repeat when source emits because exhaustMap() won't ignore the next notification (its inner Observable has completed).
Here's a custom operator that (as far s I can tell) does what you're after.
The two key insights here are:
Use connect so that you can subscribe to the source twice, once to ignore emissions with exhaustMap and another to inspect and debounce emissions with switchMap
Create an internal token so that you know when to exit without a debounced emission. (Insures that from your example above, the 4 is still emitted).
function throttleDebounceTime<T>(interval: number): MonoTypeOperatorFunction<T> {
// Use this token's memory address as a nominal token
const resetToken = {};
return connect(s$ => s$.pipe(
exhaustMap(a => s$.pipe(
startWith(resetToken),
switchMap(b => timer(interval).pipe(mapTo(b))),
take(1),
filter<T>(c => c !== resetToken),
startWith(a)
))
));
}
example:
of(1,2,3,4).pipe(
throttleDebounceTime(500)
).subscribe(console.log);
// 1 [...0.5s wait] 4
I am very new to RxJs and the problem I faced looks quite complicated for me. So, I have the following sample code
const requests = [...Array(10)].map((_, i) => fetch(`${ ENDPOINT }/${ ++i }`));
from(requests).pipe(
switchMap(response => response.json()),
catchError(val => of(val))
).subscribe(value => { ... })
I have an array of 10 requests which I would like to process somehow(as an array of resolved Promise values) in my subscribe handler. The example above works just fine when I pass in only one request instead of array, but when it comes to the array I receive
TypeError: response.json is not a function
You can use forkJoin. The important thing here is that in RxJS Promises are always turned into Observables that emit once and then complete. So you don't even need to make any conversion.
const requests = [
Promise.resolve(1),
Promise.resolve(2),
Promise.resolve(3),
];
forkJoin(requests).subscribe(console.log);
forkJoin is typically used with an array of Observables but it works with Promises as well with zero effort.
Live demo: https://stackblitz.com/edit/rxjs-gcorux
from accepts only 1 promise. You can solve it like this:
from(Promise.all(requests))
And use map instead of switchMap. In switchmap you should return another observable, not a value.
from(Promise.all(requests)).pipe(
map(responses => responses.map(response => response.json())),
catchError(val => of(val))
).subscribe(value => { ... })
And don't forget that processing an array of promises will return array of values, so you should not just get a response.json(), but do it for each element in the array
When from takes a promise as an argument it just converts it to an observable.
You can return an array of observables instead:
const requests = [...Array(10)].map((_, i) => from(fetch(`${ENDPOINT}/${++i}`)));
And then get their value by combining the streams, perhaps with forkJoin:
forkJoin(requests).subscribe(results => console.log(results));
What's the best way to handle asynchronous updates in the middle of an Observable stream.
Let's say there are 3 observables:
Obs1 (gets data from API) -> pipes to Obs2
Obs2 (transforms data) -> pipes to Obs3
Obs3 (sends transformed data)
(The actual application is more complex, and there's reasons it's not done in a single Observable, this is just a simple example).
That all works well and good if it's a linear synchronous path.
But we also have async messages that will change the output of Obs2.
3 scenarios I'm asking about are:
- we fetch data, and go through Obs1, Obs2 & Obs3
- we get a message to make a change, go through Obs2 & Obs3
- we get a different message to make a change which also needs to apply the change from the previous message, through Obs2 & Obs3
The main problem here is that there are different types of asynchronous messages that will change the outcome of Obs2, but they all need to still know what the previous outcome of Obs2 was (so the any other changes from messages that happened before is still applied)
I have tried using switchMap in Obs2 with a scan in Obs1 like this:
obs1
const obs1$ = obs1$.pipe(
// this returns a function used in the reducer.
map((data) => (prevData) => 'modifiedData',
scan((data, reducer) => reducer(betsMap), {})
)
obs2
const obs2$ = obs1$.pipe(
switchMap(data =>
someChange$.pipe(map(reducer => reducer(data)))
)
)
where someChange$ is a BehaviorSubject applying a change using another reducer function.
This works fine for async message #1 that makes some change.
But when message #2 comes in and a different change is needed, the first change is lost.
the changes that should be in "prevData" in obs1$ is always undefined because it happens before the message is applied.
How can I take the output from obs2$ and apply asynchronous updates to it that remembers what all of the past updates was? (in a way where I can clear all changes if needed)
So if i got the question right, there are two problems that this question tackles:
First: How to cache the last 2 emitted values from stream.
scan definitely is the right way, if this cache logic is needed in more than one place/file, I would go for a custom pipe operator, like the following one
function cachePipe() {
return sourceObservable =>
sourceObservable.pipe(
scan((acc, cur) => {
return acc.length === 2 ? [...acc.slice(1), cur] : [...acc, cur];
}, [])
);
}
cachePipe will always return the latest 2 values passed trough the stream.
...
.pipe(
cachePipe()
)
Second: How to access data from multiple streams at the same time, upon stream event
Here rxjs's combineLatest creation operator might do the trick for you,
combineLatest(API$, async1$ ,async2$,async3$)
.pipe(
// here I have access to an array of the last emitted value of all streams
// and the data can be passed to `Obs2` in your case
)
In the pipe I can chain whatever number of observables, which resolves the second problem.
Note:
combineLatest needs for all streams, inside of it, to emit once, before the operator strats to emit their combined value, one workaround is to use startWith operator with your input streams, another way to do it is by passing the data trough BehaviorSubject-s.
Here is a demo at CodeSandbox , that uses the cachePipe() and startWith strategy to combine the source (Obs1) with the async observables that will change the data.
I have the following epic I use in my application to handle api requests:
action$ => {
return action$.ofType(actions.requestType)
.do(() => console.log('handled epic ' + actions.requestType))
.switchMap((action) => (
Observable.create((obs) => {
obs.next({ type: type, value: action.value, form: action.form });
})
.debounceTime(250)
.switchMap((iea) => (
Observable.ajax(ajaxPost(url(iea.value), body ? body(iea.value) : action.form))
.mergeMap(payload => {
return Observable.merge(
Observable.of(actions.success(payload)),
/* some other stuff */
);
})
.catch(payload => {
return [actions.failure(payload)];
})
))
))
.takeUntil(action$.filter((a) => (a.type === masterCancelAction))
.repeat();
};
Basically, any time I perform an api request, I dispatch a request action. If I dispatch another request quickly, the previous one is ignored using debounceTime. Additionally, the request can be cancelled using the masterCancelAction and when cancelled repeat() restarts the epic. This epic works as intended in all cases expect one.
The failure case occurs when a user uses the browser back during a request. In this case I fire the masterCancelAction to the request. However, on the same execution context as a result from the masterCancelAction, another request action dispatches to perform a new request on the same epic, but the api request does not occur (the console.log does occur though) as if there was no repeat(). In other cases where cancels occur, the next request is not invoked from the same execution context and it works fine, so it seems in this case my code does not give repeat a chance to restart the epic?
A dirty workaround I found was to use setTimeout(dispatch(action), 0) on the request that dispatches after the cancellation. This seems to allow repeat() to execute. I tried passing different schedulers into repeat, but that didn't seem to help. Also, attaching takeUntil and repeat into my inner switchMap solves the problem, but then other cases where my next request does not execute in the same call stack fail.
Is there a way I can solve this problem without using setTimeout? Maybe it is not a repeat related problem, but it seems to be the case.
Using rxjs 5.0.3 and redux-observable 0.14.1.
The issue is not 100% clear without something like a jsbin to see what you mean, but I do see some general issues that might help:
Anonymous Observable never completes
When creating a custom anonymous Observable it's important to call observer.complete() if you do indeed want it to complete. In most cases, not doing so will cause the subscription to be a memory leak and might also other strange behaviors
Observable.create((observer) => {
observer.next({ type: type, value: action.value, form: action.form });
observer.complete();
})
Observable.of would have been equivalent:
Observable.of({ type: type, value: action.value, form: action.form })
However, it's not clear why this was done as the values it emits are in captured in scope.
debounceTime in this case does not debounce, it delays
Since the anonymous observable it's applied to only ever emits a single item, debounceTime will act just as a regular .delay(250). I'm betting you intended instead to debounce actions.requestType actions, in which case you'd need to apply your debouncing outside the switchMap, after the action$.ofType(actions.requestType).
Observable.of accepts any number of arguments to emit
This is more of a "did you know?" rather than an issue, but I noticed you're merging your of and /* some other actions */ I assume would be other of observables merged in. Instead, you can just return a single of and pass the actions as arguments.
Observable.of(
actions.success(payload),
/* some other actions */
actions.someOtherOne(),
actions.etc()
);
Also, when you find yourself emitting multiple actions synchronously like this, consider whether your reducers should be listening for the same, single action instead of having two or more. Sometimes this wouldn't make sense as you want them to have completely unrelated actions, just something to keep in mind that people often forget--that all reducers receive all actions and so multiple reducers can change their state from the same action.
.takeUntil will stop the epic from listening for future actions
Placing the takeUntil on the top-level observable chain causes the epic to stop listening for action$.ofType(actions.requestType), which is why you added the .repeat() after. This might work in some cases, but it's inefficient and can cause other hard to realize bugs. Epics should be thought of instead as sort of like sidecar processes that usually "start up" with the app and then continue listening for a particular action until the app "shuts down" aka the user leaves the app. They aren't actually processes, it's just helpful to conceptually think of them this way as an abstraction.
So each time it matches its particular action it then most often will switchMap, mergeMap, concatMap, or exhaustMap into some side effect, like an ajax call. That inner observable chain is what you want to make cancellable. So you'd place your .takeUntil on it, at the appropriate place in the chain.
Summary
As mentioned, it's not clear what you intended to do and what the issue is, without a more complete example like a jsbin. But strictly based on the code provided, this is my guesstimate:
const someRequestEpic = action$ => {
return action$.ofType(actions.requestType)
.debounceTime(250)
.do(() => console.log('handled epic ' + actions.requestType))
.switchMap((action) =>
Observable.ajax(ajaxPost(url(action.value), body ? body(action.value) : action.form))
.takeUntil(action$.ofType(masterCancelAction))
.mergeMap(payload => {
return Observable.of(
actions.success(payload),
/* some other actions */
...etc
);
})
.catch(payload => Observable.of(
actions.failure(payload)
))
);
};
Check out the Cancellation page in the redux-observable docs.
If this is a bit confusing, I'd recommend digging a bit deeper into what Observables are and what an "operator" is and does so that it doesn't feel magical and where you should place an operator makes more sense.
Ben's post on Learning Observable by Building Observable is a good start.
I am moving from the Promise world to the Observable world. One thing I usually do with Promise is to chain a series of tasks and make them run in sequence. For example, I have three tasks: printLog1() to print 1 to the console, printLog23() to print 2 and 3 to the console, and printLog4() to print 4.
When I want to print 1-2-3-4, I would write a promise chain like
printLog1()
.then(() => {
printLog23();
})
.then(() => {
printLog4();
});
Now I want the same functionality with Observable and I can rewrite the printLog() function into an Observable like
printLog1 = Rx.Observabale.of(1).map((i) => console.log(i));
printLog23 = Rx.Observabale.of(2, 3).map((i) => console.log(i));
printLog4 = Rx.Observabale.of(4).map((i) => console.log(i));
Then I have three observables that emits different values to the console. How do I chain them so that these three observables would run in order and print 1-2-3-4?
If you want to be sure the order of emissions is the same as the order in which you specified the source Observables you can use concat or concatMap operators.
The concat* operators subscribe to an Observable only after the previous Observable completes (it works with Promises as well, see http://reactivex.io/rxjs/class/es6/MiscJSDoc.js~ObservableInputDoc.html).
In you case it'd look like the following:
import { concat } from 'rxjs'; // Note, concat from 'rxjs', is not the same as concat from 'rxjs/operators'
concat(printLog1, printLog23, printLog4);
... or with concatMap if the request for one Promise depends on the response from the previous Promise:
printLog1.pipe(
concatMap(response => ...),
concatMap(response => ...),
);
... or when the order doesn't matter you can use merge that subscribes to all Observables/Promises immediately and reemits their results as they arrive:
merge(printLog1, printLog23, printLog4);
Jan 2019: Updated for RxJS 6
My solution:
const sequence: Observable<any>[] = [of(1), of(2), of(3)];
return concat(...sequence).pipe(toArray());