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Reactive Patterns with RxJS for Angular

Reactive Patterns with RxJS for Angular

By : Lamis Chebbi
4.1 (16)
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Reactive Patterns with RxJS for Angular

Reactive Patterns with RxJS for Angular

4.1 (16)
By: Lamis Chebbi

Overview of this book

RxJS is a fast, reliable, and compact library for handling asynchronous and event-based programs. It is a first-class citizen in Angular and enables web developers to enhance application performance, code quality, and user experience, so using reactive patterns in your Angular web development projects can improve user interaction on your apps, which will significantly improve the ROI of your applications. This book is a step-by-step guide to learning everything about RxJS and reactivity. You'll begin by understanding the importance of the reactive paradigm and the new features of RxJS 7. Next, you'll discover various reactive patterns, based on real-world use cases, for managing your application’s data efficiently and implementing common features using the fewest lines of code. As you build a complete application progressively throughout the book, you'll learn how to handle your app data reactively and explore different patterns that enhance the user experience and code quality, while also improving the maintainability of Angular apps and the developer's productivity. Finally, you'll test your asynchronous streams and enhance the performance and quality of your applications by following best practices. By the end of this RxJS Angular book, you'll be able to develop Angular applications by implementing reactive patterns.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
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1
Part 1 – Introduction
5
Part 2 – A Trip into Reactive Patterns
10
Part 3 – Multicasting Takes You to New Places
16
Part 4 – Final Touch

Exploring the reactive pattern for autosave

Let's think of the save operation as a stream; it is the result of the this.service.saveRecipe(formValue) method, which calls this.http.post<Recipe>(`${BASE_PATH}/recipes/save`, formValue. We will call it the saveRecipe$ observable.

The saveRecipe$ observable is responsible for saving the data in the backend. It will initiate the http request when subscribed to.

What we can do in this situation to avoid nested subscriptions is mapping or transforming the form value emitted by the valueChanges observable to the saveRecipe$ observable. The result is what we call a higher-order observable. Not clear? Don't worry, we will explain this in detail in the next section. So, what is a higher-order observable? And how can it help us in this situation?

Higher-order observables

A higher-order observable is just an observable like any other, but its values are observables as well. In other words, it emits observables that you...

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