This is a repository with real-world useful examples of using RxJava with Android. It usually will be in a constant state of "Work in Progress" (WIP).
I've also been giving talks about Learning Rx using many of the examples listed in this repo.
using
)A common requirement is to offload lengthy heavy I/O intensive operations to a background thread (non-UI thread) and feed the results back to the UI/main thread, on completion. This is a demo of how long-running operations can be offloaded to a background thread. After the operation is done, we resume back on the main thread. All using RxJava! Think of this as a replacement to AsyncTasks.
The long operation is simulated by a blocking Thread.sleep call (since this is done in a background thread, our UI is never interrupted).
To really see this example shine. Hit the button multiple times and see how the button click (which is a UI operation) is never blocked because the long operation only runs in the background.
This is a demo of how events can be accumulated using the "buffer" operation.
A button is provided and we accumulate the number of clicks on that button, over a span of time and then spit out the final results.
If you hit the button once, you'll get a message saying the button was hit once. If you hit it 5 times continuously within a span of 2 seconds, then you get a single log, saying you hit that button 5 times (vs 5 individual logs saying "Button hit once").
Note:
If you're looking for a more foolproof solution that accumulates "continuous" taps vs just the number of taps within a time span, look at the EventBus Demo where a combo of the publish
and buffer
operators is used. For a more detailed explanation, you can also have a look at this blog post.
This is a demo of how events can be swallowed in a way that only the last one is respected. A typical example of this is instant search result boxes. As you type the word "Bruce Lee", you don't want to execute searches for B, Br, Bru, Bruce, Bruce, Bruce L ... etc. But rather intelligently wait for a couple of moments, make sure the user has finished typing the whole word, and then shoot out a single call for "Bruce Lee".
As you type in the input box, it will not shoot out log messages at every single input character change, but rather only pick the lastly emitted event (i.e. input) and log that.
This is the debounce/throttleWithTimeout method in RxJava.
Retrofit from Square is an amazing library that helps with easy networking (even if you haven't made the jump to RxJava just yet, you really should check it out). It works even better with RxJava and these are examples hitting the GitHub API, taken straight up from the android demigod-developer Jake Wharton's talk at Netflix. You can watch the talk at this link. Incidentally, my motivation to use RxJava was from attending this talk at Netflix.
(Note: you're most likely to hit the GitHub API quota pretty fast so send in an OAuth-token as a parameter if you want to keep running these examples often).
Auto-updating views are a pretty cool thing. If you've dealt with Angular JS before, they have a pretty nifty concept called "two-way data binding", so when an HTML element is bound to a model/entity object, it constantly "listens" to changes on that entity and auto-updates its state based on the model. Using the technique in this example, you could potentially use a pattern like the Presentation View Model pattern with great ease.
While the example here is pretty rudimentary, the technique used to achieve the double binding using a Publish Subject
is much more interesting.
This is an example of polling using RxJava Schedulers. This is useful in cases, where you want to constantly poll a server and possibly get new data. The network call is "simulated" so it forces a delay before return a resultant string.
There are two variants for this:
The second example is basically a variant of Exponential Backoff.
Instead of using a RetryWithDelay, we use a RepeatWithDelay here. To understand the difference between Retry(When) and Repeat(When) I wouuld suggest Dan's fantastic post on the subject.
An alternative approach to delayed polling without the use of repeatWhen
would be using chained nested delay observables. See startExecutingWithExponentialBackoffDelay in the ExponentialBackOffFragment example.
Exponential backoff is a strategy where based on feedback from a certain output, we alter the rate of a process (usually reducing the number of retries or increasing the wait time before retrying or re-executing a certain process).
The concept makes more sense with examples. RxJava makes it (relatively) simple to implement such a strategy. My thanks to Mike for suggesting the idea.
Say you have a network failure. A sensible strategy would be to NOT keep retrying your network call every 1 second. It would be smart instead (nay... elegant!) to retry with increasing delays. So you try at second 1 to execute the network call, no dice? try after 10 seconds... negatory? try after 20 seconds, no cookie? try after 1 minute. If this thing is still failing, you got to give up on the network yo!
We simulate this behaviour using RxJava with the retryWhen
operator.
RetryWithDelay
code snippet courtesy:
Also look at the Polling example where we use a very similar Exponential backoff mechanism.
Another variant of the exponential backoff strategy is to execute an operation for a given number of times but with delayed intervals. So you execute a certain operation 1 second from now, then you execute it again 10 seconds from now, then you execute the operation 20 seconds from now. After a grand total of 3 times you stop executing.
Simulating this behavior is actually way more simpler than the prevoius retry mechanism. You can use a variant of the delay
operator to achieve this.
.combineLatest
)Thanks to Dan Lew for giving me this idea in the fragmented podcast - episode #4 (around the 4:30 mark).
.combineLatest
allows you to monitor the state of multiple observables at once compactly at a single location. The example demonstrated shows how you can use .combineLatest
to validate a basic form. There are 3 primary inputs for this form to be considered "valid" (an email, a password and a number). The form will turn valid (the text below turns blue :P) once all the inputs are valid. If they are not, an error is shown against the invalid inputs.
We have 3 independent observables that track the text/input changes for each of the form fields (RxAndroid's WidgetObservable
comes in handy to monitor the text changes). After an event change is noticed from all 3 inputs, the result is "combined" and the form is evaluated for validity.
Note that the Func3
function that checks for validity, kicks in only after ALL 3 inputs have received a text change event.
The value of this technique becomes more apparent when you have more number of input fields in a form. Handling it otherwise with a bunch of booleans makes the code cluttered and kind of difficult to follow. But using .combineLatest
all that logic is concentrated in a nice compact block of code (I still use booleans but that was to make the example more readable).
We have two source Observables: a disk (fast) cache and a network (fresh) call. Typically the disk Observable is much faster than the network Observable. But in order to demonstrate the working, we've also used a fake "slower" disk cache just to see how the operators behave.
This is demonstrated using 4 techniques:
.concat
.concatEager
.merge
.publish
selector + merge + takeUntilThe 4th technique is probably what you want to use eventually but it's interesting to go through the progression of techniques, to understand why.
concat
is great. It retrieves information from the first Observable (disk cache in our case) and then the subsequent network Observable. Since the disk cache is presumably faster, all appears well and the disk cache is loaded up fast, and once the network call finishes we swap out the "fresh" results.
The problem with concat
is that the subsequent observable doesn't even start until the first Observable completes. That can be a problem. We want all observables to start simultaneously but produce the results in a way we expect. Thankfully RxJava introduced concatEager
which does exactly that. It starts both observables but buffers the result from the latter one until the former Observable finishes. This is a completely viable option.
Sometimes though, you just want to start showing the results immediately. Assuming the first observable (for some strange reason) takes really long to run through all its items, even if the first few items from the second observable have come down the wire it will forcibly be queued. You don't necessarily want to "wait" on any Observable. In these situations, we could use the merge
operator. It interleaves items as they are emitted. This works great and starts to spit out the results as soon as they're shown.
Similar to the concat
operator, if your first Observable is always faster than the second Observable you won't run into any problems. However the problem with merge
is: if for some strange reason an item is emitted by the cache or slower observable after the newer/fresher observable, it will overwrite the newer content. Click the "MERGE (SLOWER DISK)" button in the example to see this problem in action. @JakeWharton and @swankjesse contributions go to 0! In the real world this could be bad, as it would mean the fresh data would get overridden by stale disk data.
To solve this problem you can use merge in combination with the super nifty publish
operator which takes in a "selector". I wrote about this usage in a blog post but I have Jedi JW to thank for reminding of this technique. We publish
the network observable and provide it a selector which starts emitting from the disk cache, up until the point that the network observable starts emitting. Once the network observable starts emitting, it ignores all results from the disk observable. This is perfect and handles any problems we might have.
Previously, I was using the merge
operator but overcoming the problem of results being overwritten by monitoring the "resultAge". See the old PseudoCacheMergeFragment
example if you're curious to see this old implementation.
This is a super simple and straightforward example which shows you how to use RxJava's timer
, interval
and delay
operators to handle a bunch of cases where you want to run a task at specific intervals. Basically say NO to Android TimerTask
s.
Cases demonstrated here:
There are accompanying blog posts that do a much better job of explaining the details on this demo:
A common question that's asked when using RxJava in Android is, "how do i resume the work of an observable if a configuration change occurs (activity rotation, language locale change etc.)?".
This example shows you one strategy viz. using retained Fragments. I started using retained fragments as "worker fragments" after reading this fantastic post by Alex Lockwood quite sometime back.
Hit the start button and rotate the screen to your heart's content; you'll see the observable continue from where it left off.
There are certain quirks about the "hotness" of the source observable used in this example. Check my blog post out where I explain the specifics.
I have since rewritten this example using an alternative approach. While the ConnectedObservable
approach worked it enters the lands of "multicasting" which can be tricky (thread-safety, .refcount etc.). Subjects on the other hand are far more simple. You can see it rewritten using a Subject
here.
I wrote another blog post on how to think about Subjects where I go into some specifics.
Volley is another networking library introduced by Google at IO '13. A kind citizen of github contributed this example so we know how to integrate Volley with RxJava.
I leverage the simple use of a Subject here. Honestly, if you don't have your items coming down via an Observable
already (like through Retrofit or a network request), there's no good reason to use Rx and complicate things.
This example basically sends the page number to a Subject, and the subject handles adding the items. Notice the use of concatMap
and the return of an Observable<List>
from _itemsFromNetworkCall
.
For kicks, I've also included a PaginationAutoFragment
example, this "auto-paginates" without us requiring to hit a button. It should be simple to follow if you got how the previous example works.
Here are some other fancy implementations (while i enjoyed reading them, i didn't land up using them for my real world app cause personally i don't think it's necessary):
The below ascii diagram expresses the intention of our next example with panache. f1,f2,f3,f4,f5 are essentially network calls that when made, give back a result that's needed for a future calculation.
(flatmap)
f1 ___________________ f3 _______
(flatmap) | (zip)
f2 ___________________ f4 _______| ___________ final output
\ |
\____________ f5 _______|
The code for this example has already been written by one Mr.skehlet in the interwebs. Head over to the gist for the code. It's written in pure Java (6) so it's pretty comprehensible if you've understood the previous examples. I'll flush it out here again when time permits or I've run out of other compelling examples.
This is a simple example demonstrating the use of the .timeout
operator. Button 1 will complete the task before the timeout constraint, while Button 2 will force a timeout error.
Notice how we can provide a custom Observable that indicates how to react under a timeout Exception.
using
)The operator using
is relatively less known and notoriously hard to Google. It's a beautiful API that helps to setup a (costly) resource, use it and then dispose off in a clean way.
The nice thing about this operator is that it provides a mechansim to use potentially costly resources in a tightly scoped manner. using -> setup, use and dispose. Think DB connections (like Realm instances), socket connections, thread locks etc.
Multicasting in Rx is like a dark art. Not too many folks know how to pull it off without concern. This example condiers two subscribers (in the forms of buttons) and allows you to add/remove subscribers at different points of time and see how the different operators behave under those circumstances.
The source observale is a timer (interval
) observable and the reason this was chosen was to intentionally pick a non-terminating observable, so you can test/confirm if your multicast experiment will leak.
I also gave a talk about Multicasting in detail at 360|Andev. If you have the inclination and time, I highly suggest watching that talk first (specifically the Multicast operator permutation segment) and then messing around with the example here.
All the examples here have been migrated to use RxJava 2.X.
We use David Karnok's Interop library in some cases as certain libraries like RxBindings, RxRelays, RxJava-Math etc. have not been ported yet to 2.x.
I try to ensure the examples are not overly contrived but reflect a real-world usecase. If you have similar useful examples demonstrating the use of RxJava, feel free to send in a pull request.
I'm wrapping my head around RxJava too so if you feel there's a better way of doing one of the examples mentioned above, open up an issue explaining how. Even better, send a pull request.
Rx threading is messy business. To help, this project uses YourKit tools for analysis.
YourKit supports open source projects with innovative and intelligent tools for monitoring and profiling Java applications. YourKit is the creator of YourKit Java Profiler.
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"). You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.
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