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Connectable Observable Operators
This section explains the ConnectableObservable
subclass and its operators:
-
ConnectableObservable.connect( )
— instructs a Connectable Observable to begin emitting values -
Observable.publish( )
— represents an Observable as a Connectable Observable -
Observable.multicast( )
— -
Observable.replay( )
— ensures that all observers see the same sequence, even if they subscribe after the Observable begins emitting the sequence
A Connectable Observable resembles an ordinary Observable, except that it does not begin emitting a sequence of values when it is subscribed to, but only when its connect()
method is called. In this way you can wait for all intended observers to subscribe to the Observable before the Observable begins emitting values.
The following example code shows two observers subscribing to the same Observable. In the first case, they subscribe to an ordinary Observable; in the second case, they subscribe to a Connectable Observable that only connects after both observers subscribe. Note the difference in the output:
Example #1:
def firstMillion = Observable.range( 1, 1000000 ).sample(7, java.util.concurrent.TimeUnit.MILLISECONDS);
firstMillion.subscribe(
[ onNext:{ myWriter.println("Subscriber #1:" + it); },
onCompleted:{ myWriter.println("Sequence #1 complete"); },
onError:{ myWriter.println("Error encountered"); } ]
);
firstMillion.subscribe(
[ onNext:{ myWriter.println("Subscriber #2:" + it); },
onCompleted:{ myWriter.println("Sequence #2 complete"); },
onError:{ myWriter.println("Error encountered"); } ]
);
Subscriber #1:211128
Subscriber #1:411633
Subscriber #1:629605
Subscriber #1:841903
Sequence #1 complete
Subscriber #2:244776
Subscriber #2:431416
Subscriber #2:621647
Subscriber #2:826996
Sequence #2 complete
Example #2:
def firstMillion = Observable.range( 1, 1000000 ).sample(7, java.util.concurrent.TimeUnit.MILLISECONDS).publish();
firstMillion.subscribe(
[ onNext:{ myWriter.println("Subscriber #1:" + it); },
onCompleted:{ myWriter.println("Sequence #1 complete"); },
onError:{ myWriter.println("Error encountered"); } ]
);
firstMillion.subscribe(
[ onNext:{ myWriter.println("Subscriber #2:" + it); },
onCompleted:{ myWriter.println("Sequence #2 complete"); },
onError:{ myWriter.println("Error encountered"); } ]
);
firstMillion.connect();
Subscriber #2:208683
Subscriber #1:208683
Subscriber #2:432509
Subscriber #1:432509
Subscriber #2:644270
Subscriber #1:644270
Subscriber #2:887885
Subscriber #1:887885
Sequence #2 complete
Sequence #1 complete
Call a Connectable Observable's connect( )
method to instruct it to begin emitting the objects from its underlying Observable to its subscribing observers.
The connect( )
method returns a Subscription
. You can call that object's unsubscribe( )
method to instruct the Observable to stop emitting values to its subscribers.
You can also use the connect( )
method to instruct an Observable to begin emitting values (or, to begin generating values that would be emitted anyway) even before any observer has subscribed to it.
To represent an Observable as a Connectable Observable, use the Observable's publish( )
method.
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