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zen-observable

An implementation of Observables for JavaScript. Requires Promises or a Promise polyfill.

Install

npm install zen-observable

Usage

import Observable from 'zen-observable';

Observable.of(1, 2, 3).subscribe(x => console.log(x));

API

new Observable(subscribe)

let observable = new Observable(observer => {
  // Emit a single value after 1 second
  let timer = setTimeout(() => {
    observer.next('hello');
    observer.complete();
  }, 1000);

  // On unsubscription, cancel the timer
  return () => clearTimeout(timer);
});

Creates a new Observable object using the specified subscriber function. The subscriber function is called whenever the subscribe method of the observable object is invoked. The subscriber function is passed an observer object which has the following methods:

The subscriber function can optionally return either a cleanup function or a subscription object. If it returns a cleanup function, that function will be called when the subscription has closed. If it returns a subscription object, then the subscription's unsubscribe method will be invoked when the subscription has closed.

Observable.of(...items)

// Logs 1, 2, 3
Observable.of(1, 2, 3).subscribe(x => {
  console.log(x);
});

Returns an observable which will emit each supplied argument.

Observable.from(value)

let list = [1, 2, 3];

// Iterate over an object
Observable.from(list).subscribe(x => {
  console.log(x);
});
// Convert something 'observable' to an Observable instance
Observable.from(otherObservable).subscribe(x => {
  console.log(x);
});

Converts value to an Observable.

observable.subscribe([observer])

let subscription = observable.subscribe({
  next(x) { console.log(x) },
  error(err) { console.log(`Finished with error: ${ err }`) },
  complete() { console.log('Finished') }
});

Subscribes to the observable. Observer objects may have any of the following methods:

Returns a subscription object that can be used to cancel the stream.

observable.subscribe(nextCallback[, errorCallback, completeCallback])

let subscription = observable.subscribe(
  x => console.log(x),
  err => console.log(`Finished with error: ${ err }`),
  () => console.log('Finished')
);

Subscribes to the observable with callback functions. Returns a subscription object that can be used to cancel the stream.

observable.forEach(callback)

observable.forEach(x => {
  console.log(`Received value: ${ x }`);
}).then(() => {
  console.log('Finished successfully')
}).catch(err => {
  console.log(`Finished with error: ${ err }`);
})

Subscribes to the observable and returns a Promise for the completion value of the stream. The callback argument is called once for each value in the stream.

observable.filter(callback)

Observable.of(1, 2, 3).filter(value => {
  return value > 2;
}).subscribe(value => {
  console.log(value);
});
// 3

Returns a new Observable that emits all values which pass the test implemented by the callback argument.

observable.map(callback)

Returns a new Observable that emits the results of calling the callback argument for every value in the stream.

Observable.of(1, 2, 3).map(value => {
  return value * 2;
}).subscribe(value => {
  console.log(value);
});
// 2
// 4
// 6

observable.reduce(callback [,initialValue])

Observable.of(0, 1, 2, 3, 4).reduce((previousValue, currentValue) => {
  return previousValue + currentValue;
}).subscribe(result => {
  console.log(result);
});
// 10

Returns a new Observable that applies a function against an accumulator and each value of the stream to reduce it to a single value.

observable.concat(...sources)

Observable.of(1, 2, 3).concat(
  Observable.of(4, 5, 6),
  Observable.of(7, 8, 9)
).subscribe(result => {
  console.log(result);
});
// 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9

Merges the current observable with additional observables.

observable.all()

let observable = Observable.of(1, 2, 3);
for (let value of await observable.all()) {
  console.log(value);
}
// 1, 2, 3

Returns a Promise for an array containing all of the values produced by the observable.