Chaining Observables in RxJS

Harindaka picture Harindaka · Jun 12, 2016 · Viewed 99.9k times · Source

I'm learning RxJS and Angular 2. Let's say I have a promise chain with multiple async function calls which depend on the previous one's result which looks like:

var promiseChain = new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
  setTimeout(() => {
    resolve(1);
  }, 1000);
}).then((result) => {
  console.log(result);

  return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
    setTimeout(() => {
      resolve(result + 2);
    }, 1000);
  });
}).then((result) => {
  console.log(result);

  return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
      setTimeout(() => {
      resolve(result + 3);
        }, 1000);
  });
});

promiseChain.then((finalResult) => {
  console.log(finalResult);
});

My attempts at doing the same solely using RxJS without the use of promises produced the following:

var observableChain = Observable.create((observer) => {
  setTimeout(() => {
    observer.next(1);
    observer.complete();
  }, 1000);
}).flatMap((result) => {
  console.log(result);

  return Observable.create((observer) => {
    setTimeout(() => {
      observer.next(result + 2);
      observer.complete()
    }, 1000);
  });
}).flatMap((result) => {
  console.log(result);

  return Observable.create((observer) => {
    setTimeout(() => {
      observer.next(result + 3);
      observer.complete()
    }, 1000);
  });
});

observableChain.subscribe((finalResult) => {
  console.log(finalResult);
});

It yields the same output as the promise chain. My questions are

  1. Am I doing this right? Are there any RxJS related improvements that I can make to the above code

  2. How do I get this observable chain to execute repeatedly? i.e. Adding another subscription at the end just produces an additional 6 though I expect it to print 1, 3 and 6.

    observableChain.subscribe((finalResult) => { console.log(finalResult); });

    observableChain.subscribe((finalResult) => { console.log(finalResult); });

    1 3 6 6

Answer

user3743222 picture user3743222 · Jun 12, 2016

About promise composition vs. Rxjs, as this is a frequently asked question, you can refer to a number of previously asked questions on SO, among which :

Basically, flatMap is the equivalent of Promise.then.

For your second question, do you want to replay values already emitted, or do you want to process new values as they arrive? In the first case, check the publishReplay operator. In the second case, standard subscription is enough. However you might need to be aware of the cold. vs. hot dichotomy depending on your source (cf. Hot and Cold observables : are there 'hot' and 'cold' operators? for an illustrated explanation of the concept)