Angular 2 - Return data directly from an Observable

Sidriel picture Sidriel · Jun 16, 2016 · Viewed 42.7k times · Source

I've been banging my head against this one trying to figure it out, and no amount of documentation I've been able to read has given me an answer to my question.

I have a service which is speaking directly to an API and returning an observable event which under normal circumstances I would subscribe to and do what I want with the data, however in a secondary service which utilizes the requests from the restful service, I need to be able to return values from the request.

getSomething() {
    return this._restService.addRequest('object', 'method').run()
        .subscribe(
            res => {
                res;
            },
            err => {
                console.error(err);
            }
        );
}

returnSomething() {
    return this.getSomething();
}

In the quick example above, I want to know if there is any way I can return res from getSomething() within returnSomething(). If it's not achievable in this way, what is the alternative? I will add that the _restService is pretty heavily relied upon and I don't really want to start messing with that.

Answer

rinukkusu picture rinukkusu · Jun 16, 2016

Since http calls and the like are async, you get an Observable instead of a synchronous value returned. You have to subscribe to it, and in the callback in there you get the data. There is no way around that.

One option would be to place your logic in the subscribe call

getSomething() {
    return this._restService.addRequest('object', 'method').run()
        .subscribe(
            res => {
                // do something here
                res;
            },
            err => {
                console.error(err);
            }
        );
}

But the way I like doing it is to add a callback, to inject the logic from outside (maybe a component, maybe another service):

getSomething(callback: (data) => void) {
    return this._restService.addRequest('object', 'method').run()
        .subscribe(
            res => {
                callback(res);
            },
            err => {
                console.error(err);
            }
        );
}

And in your component or wherever:

this._yourService.getSomething((data) => {
    // do something here
    console.log(data);
});