RxJava – Quick Guide


Table of Contents

RxJava – Quick Guide


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RxJava – Overview

RxJava is a Java based extension of ReactiveX. It provides implementation or ReactiveX project in Java. Following are the key characteristics of RxJava.

  • Extends the observer pattern.

  • Support sequences of data/events.

  • Provides operators to compose sequences together declaratively.

  • Handles threading, synchronization, thread-safety and concurrent data structures internally.

What is ReactiveX?

ReactiveX is a project which aims to provide reactive programming concept to various programming languages. Reactive Programming refers to the scenario where program reacts as and when data appears. It is a event based programming concept and events can propagate to registers observers.

As per the Reactive, they have combined the best of Observer pattern, Iterator pattern and functional pattern.

The Observer pattern done right. ReactiveX is a combination of the best ideas from the Observer pattern, the Iterator pattern, and functional programming.

Functional Programming

Functional programming revolves around building the software using pure functions. A pure function do not depends upon previous state and always returns the same result for the same parameters passed. Pure functions helps avoiding problems associated with shared objects, mutable data and side effects often prevalent in multi-threading environments.

Reactive Programming

Reactive programming refers to event driven programming where data streams comes in asynchronous fashion and get processed when they are arrived.

Functional Reactive Programming

RxJava implements both the concepts together, where data of streams changes over time and consumer function reacts accordingly.

The Reactive Manifesto

Reactive Manifesto is an on-line document stating the high standard of application software systems. As per the manifesto, following are the key attributes of a reactive software −

  • Responsive − Should always respond in a timely fashion.

  • Message Driven − Should use asynchronous message-passing between components so that they maintain loose coupling.

  • Elastic − Should stay responsive even under high load.

  • Resilient − Should stay responsive even if any component(s) fail.

Key components of RxJava

RxJava have two key components: Observables and Observer.

  • Observable − It represents an object similar to Stream which can emit zero or more data, can send error message, whose speed can be controlled while emitting a set of data, can send finite as well as infinite data.

  • Observer − It subscribes to Observable”s data of sequence and reacts per item of the observables. Observers are notified whenever Observable emits a data. An Observer handles data one by one.

An observer is never notified if items are not present or a callback is not returned for a previous item.

RxJava – Environment Setup

Local Environment Setup

RxJava is a library for Java, so the very first requirement is to have JDK installed in your machine.

System Requirement

JDK 1.5 or above.
Memory No minimum requirement.
Disk Space No minimum requirement.
Operating System No minimum requirement.

Step 1 – Verify Java Installation in Your Machine

First of all, open the console and execute a java command based on the operating system you are working on.

OS Task Command
Windows Open Command Console c:> java -version
Linux Open Command Terminal $ java -version
Mac Open Terminal machine:< joseph$ java -version

Let”s verify the output for all the operating systems −

OS Output
Windows

java version “1.8.0_101”

Java(TM) SE Runtime Environment (build 1.8.0_101)

Linux

java version “1.8.0_101”

Java(TM) SE Runtime Environment (build 1.8.0_101)

Mac

java version “1.8.0_101”

Java(TM) SE Runtime Environment (build 1.8.0_101)

If you do not have Java installed on your system, then download the Java Software Development Kit (SDK) from the following link https://www.oracle.com. We are assuming Java 1.8.0_101 as the installed version for this tutorial.

Step 2 – Set JAVA Environment

Set the JAVA_HOME environment variable to point to the base directory location where Java is installed on your machine. For example.

OS Output
Windows Set the environment variable JAVA_HOME to C:Program FilesJavajdk1.8.0_101
Linux export JAVA_HOME = /usr/local/java-current
Mac export JAVA_HOME = /Library/Java/Home

Append Java compiler location to the System Path.

OS Output
Windows Append the string C:Program FilesJavajdk1.8.0_101bin at the end of the system variable, Path.
Linux export PATH = $PATH:$JAVA_HOME/bin/
Mac not required

Verify Java installation using the command java -version as explained above.

Step 3 – Download RxJava2 Archive

Download the latest version of RxJava jar file from RxJava @ MVNRepository
and its dependency Reactive Streams @ MVNRepository
. At the time of writing this tutorial, we have downloaded rxjava-2.2.4.jar, reactive-streams-1.0.2.jar and copied it into C:>RxJava folder.

OS Archive name
Windows rxjava-2.2.4.jar, reactive-streams-1.0.2.jar
Linux rxjava-2.2.4.jar, reactive-streams-1.0.2.jar
Mac rxjava-2.2.4.jar, reactive-streams-1.0.2.jar

Step 4 – Set RxJava Environment

Set the RX_JAVA environment variable to point to the base directory location where RxJava jar is stored on your machine. Let’s assuming we”ve stored rxjava-2.2.4.jar and reactive-streams-1.0.2.jar in the RxJava folder.

Sr.No OS & Description
1

Windows

Set the environment variable RX_JAVA to C:RxJava

2

Linux

export RX_JAVA = /usr/local/RxJava

3

Mac

export RX_JAVA = /Library/RxJava

Step 5 – Set CLASSPATH Variable

Set the CLASSPATH environment variable to point to the RxJava jar location.

Sr.No OS & Description
1

Windows

Set the environment variable CLASSPATH to %CLASSPATH%;%RX_JAVA%rxjava-2.2.4.jar;%RX_JAVA%reactive-streams-1.0.2.jar;.;

2

Linux

export CLASSPATH = $CLASSPATH:$RX_JAVA/rxjava-2.2.4.jar:reactive-streams-1.0.2.jar:.

3

Mac

export CLASSPATH = $CLASSPATH:$RX_JAVA/rxjava-2.2.4.jar:reactive-streams-1.0.2.jar:.

Step 6 – Test RxJava Setup

Create a class TestRx.java as shown below −

import io.reactivex.Flowable;
public class TestRx {
   public static void main(String[] args) {
      Flowable.just("Hello World!")
         .subscribe(System.out::println);
   }
}

Step 7 – Verify the Result

Compile the classes using javac compiler as follows −

C:RxJava>javac Tester.java

Verify the output.

Hello World!

RxJava – How Observable works

Observables represents the sources of data where as Observers (Subscribers) listen to them. In nutshell, an Observable emits items and a Subscriber then consumes these items.

Observable

  • Observable provides data once subscriber starts listening.

  • Observable can emit any number of items.

  • Observable can emit only signal of completion as well with no item.

  • Observable can terminate successfully.

  • Observable may never terminate. e.g. a button can be clicked any number of times.

  • Observable may throw error at any point of time.

Subscriber

  • Observable can have multiple subscribers.

  • When an Observable emits an item, each subscriber onNext() method gets invoked.

  • When an Observable finished emitting items, each subscriber onComplete() method gets invoked.

  • If an Observable emits error, each subscriber onError() method gets invoked.

RxJava – Creating Observables

Following are the base classes to create observables.

  • Flowable − 0..N flows, Emits 0 or n items. Supports Reactive-Streams and back-pressure.

  • Observable − 0..N flows ,but no back-pressure.

  • Single − 1 item or error. Can be treated as a reactive version of method call.

  • Completable − No item emitted. Used as a signal for completion or error. Can be treated as a reactive version of Runnable.

  • MayBe − Either No item or 1 item emitted. Can be treated as a reactive version of Optional.

Following are the convenient methods to create observables in Observable class.

  • just(T item) − Returns an Observable that signals the given (constant reference) item and then completes.

  • fromIterable(Iterable source) − Converts an Iterable sequence into an ObservableSource that emits the items in the sequence.

  • fromArray(T… items) − Converts an Array into an ObservableSource that emits the items in the Array.

  • fromCallable(Callable supplier) − Returns an Observable that, when an observer subscribes to it, invokes a function you specify and then emits the value returned from that function.

  • fromFuture(Future future) − Converts a Future into an ObservableSource.

  • interval(long initialDelay, long period, TimeUnit unit) − Returns an Observable that emits a 0L after the initialDelay and ever increasing numbers after each period of time thereafter.

RxJava – Single Observable

The Single class represents the single value response. Single observable can only emit either a single successful value or an error. It does not emit onComplete event.

Class Declaration

Following is the declaration for io.reactivex.Single<T> class −

public abstract class Single<T>
   extends Object
      implements SingleSource<T>

Protocol

Following is the sequential protocol that Single Observable operates −

onSubscribe (onSuccess | onError)?

Single Example

Create the following Java program using any editor of your choice in, say, C:> RxJava.

ObservableTester.java

import java.util.concurrent.TimeUnit;

import io.reactivex.Single;
import io.reactivex.disposables.Disposable;
import io.reactivex.observers.DisposableSingleObserver;
import io.reactivex.schedulers.Schedulers;

public class ObservableTester  {
   public static void main(String[] args)  throws InterruptedException {
      //Create the observable
      Single<String> testSingle = Single.just("Hello World");

      //Create an observer
      Disposable disposable = testSingle
         .delay(2, TimeUnit.SECONDS, Schedulers.io())
         .subscribeWith(
         new DisposableSingleObserver<String>() {

         @Override
         public void onError(Throwable e) { 
            e.printStackTrace();
         }

         @Override
         public void onSuccess(String value) {
            System.out.println(value);
         }
      }); 
      Thread.sleep(3000);
      //start observing
      disposable.dispose();
   }
}

Verify the Result

Compile the class using javac compiler as follows −

C:RxJava>javac ObservableTester.java

Now run the ObservableTester as follows −

C:RxJava>java ObservableTester

It should produce the following output −

Hello World

RxJava – MayBe Observable

The MayBe class represents deferred response. MayBe observable can emit either a single successful value or no value.

Class Declaration

Following is the declaration for io.reactivex.Single<T> class −

public abstract class Maybe<T>
   extends Object
      implements MaybeSource<T>

Protocol

Following is the sequential protocol that MayBe Observable operates −

onSubscribe (onSuccess | onError | OnComplete)?

MayBe Example

Create the following Java program using any editor of your choice in, say, C:> RxJava.

ObservableTester.java

import java.util.concurrent.TimeUnit;

import io.reactivex.Maybe;
import io.reactivex.disposables.Disposable;
import io.reactivex.observers.DisposableMaybeObserver;
import io.reactivex.schedulers.Schedulers;

public class ObservableTester {
   public static void main(String[] args) throws InterruptedException {
      //Create an observer
      Disposable disposable = Maybe.just("Hello World")
         .delay(2, TimeUnit.SECONDS, Schedulers.io())
         .subscribeWith(new DisposableMaybeObserver<String>() {
         @Override
         public void onError(Throwable e) { 
            e.printStackTrace();
         }

         @Override
         public void onSuccess(String value) {
            System.out.println(value);
         }

         @Override
         public void onComplete() {
            System.out.println("Done!");
         }
      }); 
      Thread.sleep(3000);
      //start observing
      disposable.dispose();
   }
}

Verify the Result

Compile the class using javac compiler as follows −

C:RxJava>javac ObservableTester.java

Now run the ObservableTester as follows −

C:RxJava>java ObservableTester

It should produce the following output −

Hello World

RxJava – Completable Observable

The Completable class represents deferred response. Completable observable can either indicate a successful completion or error.

Class Declaration

Following is the declaration for io.reactivex.Completable class −

public abstract class Completable
extends Object
implements CompletableSource

Protocol

Following is the sequential protocol that Completable Observable operates −

onSubscribe (onError | onComplete)?

Completable Example

Create the following Java program using any editor of your choice in, say, C:> RxJava.

ObservableTester.java

import java.util.concurrent.TimeUnit;

import io.reactivex.Completable;
import io.reactivex.disposables.Disposable;
import io.reactivex.observers.DisposableCompletableObserver;
import io.reactivex.schedulers.Schedulers;

public class ObservableTester {
   public static void main(String[] args) throws InterruptedException {

      //Create an observer
      Disposable disposable = Completable.complete()
         .delay(2, TimeUnit.SECONDS, Schedulers.io())
         .subscribeWith(new DisposableCompletableObserver() {
         @Override
         public void onError(Throwable e) { 
            e.printStackTrace();
         }
         @Override
         public void onStart() {
            System.out.println("Started!");
         }
         @Override
         public void onComplete() {
            System.out.println("Done!");
         }
      }); 
      Thread.sleep(3000);
      //start observing
      disposable.dispose();
   }
}

Verify the Result

Compile the class using javac compiler as follows −

C:RxJava>javac ObservableTester.java

Now run the ObservableTester as follows −

C:RxJava>java ObservableTester

It should produce the following output −

Started!
Done!

RxJava – Using CompositeDisposable

The CompositeDisposable class represents a container which can hold multiple disposable and offers O(1) complexity of adding and removing disposables.

Class Declaration

Following is the declaration for io.reactivex.disposables.CompositeDisposable class −

public final class CompositeDisposable
extends Object
implements Disposable, io.reactivex.internal.disposables.DisposableContainer

CompositeDisposable Example

Create the following Java program using any editor of your choice in, say, C:> RxJava.

ObservableTester.java

import io.reactivex.Maybe;
import io.reactivex.Single;
import io.reactivex.disposables.CompositeDisposable;
import io.reactivex.disposables.Disposable;
import io.reactivex.observers.DisposableMaybeObserver;
import io.reactivex.observers.DisposableSingleObserver;
import io.reactivex.schedulers.Schedulers;

import java.util.concurrent.TimeUnit;

public class ObservableTester  {
   public static void main(String[] args)  throws InterruptedException {    
      CompositeDisposable compositeDisposable = new CompositeDisposable();

      //Create an Single observer 
      Disposable disposableSingle = Single.just("Hello World")
      .delay(2, TimeUnit.SECONDS, Schedulers.io())
      .subscribeWith(
      new DisposableSingleObserver<String>() {
         @Override
         public void onError(Throwable e) {
            e.printStackTrace();
         }

         @Override
         public void onSuccess(String value) {
            System.out.println(value);
         }
      }); 

      //Create an observer
      Disposable disposableMayBe = Maybe.just("Hi")
      .delay(2, TimeUnit.SECONDS, Schedulers.io())
      .subscribeWith(new DisposableMaybeObserver<String>() {
         @Override
         public void onError(Throwable e) { 
            e.printStackTrace();
         }

         @Override
         public void onSuccess(String value) {
            System.out.println(value);
         }

         @Override
         public void onComplete() {
            System.out.println("Done!");
         }
      }); 

      Thread.sleep(3000);

      compositeDisposable.add(disposableSingle);
      compositeDisposable.add(disposableMayBe);

      //start observing
      compositeDisposable.dispose();
   }
}

Verify the Result

Compile the class using javac compiler as follows −

C:RxJava>javac ObservableTester.java

Now run the ObservableTester as follows −

C:RxJava>java ObservableTester

It should produce the following output −

Hello World
Hi

RxJava – Creating Operators

Following are the operators which are used to create an Observable.

Sr.No. Operator & Description
1

Create

Creates an Observable from scratch and allows observer method to call programmatically.

2

Defer

Do not create an Observable until an observer subscribes. Creates a fresh observable for each observer.

3

Empty/Never/Throw

Creates an Observable with limited behavior.

4

From

Converts an object/data structure into an Observable.

5

Interval

Creates an Observable emitting integers in sequence with a gap of specified time interval.

6

Just

Converts an object/data structure into an Observable to emit the same or same type of objects.

7

Range

Creates an Observable emitting integers in sequence of given range.

8

Repeat

Creates an Observable emitting integers in sequence repeatedly.

9

Start

Creates an Observable to emit the return value of a function.

10

Timer

Creates an Observable to emit a single item after given delay.

Creating Operator Example

Create the following Java program using any editor of your choice in, say, C:> RxJava.

ObservableTester.java

import io.reactivex.Observable;
//Using fromArray operator to create an Observable
public class ObservableTester  {
   public static void main(String[] args) { 
      String[] letters = {"a", "b", "c", "d", "e", "f", "g"};
      final StringBuilder result = new StringBuilder();
      Observable<String> observable = Observable.fromArray(letters);
      observable
         .map(String::toUpperCase)
         .subscribe( letter -> result.append(letter));
      System.out.println(result);
   }
}

Verify the Result

Compile the class using javac compiler as follows −

C:RxJava>javac ObservableTester.java

Now run the ObservableTester as follows −

C:RxJava>java ObservableTester

It should produce the following output −

ABCDEFG

RxJava – Transforming Operators

Following are the operators which are used to transform an item emitted from an Observable.

Sr.No. Operator & Description
1

Buffer

Gathers items from Observable into bundles periodically and then emit the bundles rather than items.

2

FlatMap

Used in nested observables. Transforms items into Observables. Then flatten the items into single Observable.

3

GroupBy

Divide an Observable into set of Observables organized by key to emit different group of items.

4

Map

Apply a function to each emitted item to transform it.

5

Scan

Apply a function to each emitted item, sequentially and then emit the successive value.

6

Window

Gathers items from Observable into Observable windows periodically and then emit the windows rather than items.

Transforming Operator Example

Create the following Java program using any editor of your choice in, say, C:> RxJava.

ObservableTester.java

import io.reactivex.Observable;
//Using map operator to transform an Observable
public class ObservableTester  { 
   public static void main(String[] args) {    
      String[] letters = {"a", "b", "c", "d", "e", "f", "g"};
      final StringBuilder result = new StringBuilder();
      Observable<String> observable = Observable.fromArray(letters);
      observable
         .map(String::toUpperCase)
         .subscribe( letter -> result.append(letter));
      System.out.println(result);
   }
}

Verify the Result

Compile the class using javac compiler as follows −

C:RxJava>javac ObservableTester.java

Now run the ObservableTester as follows −

C:RxJava>java ObservableTester

It should produce the following output −

ABCDEFG

RxJava – Filtering Operators

Following are the operators which are used to selectively emit item(s) from an Observable.

Sr.No. Operator & Description
1

Debounce

Emits items only when timeout occurs without emiting another item.

2

Distinct

Emits only unique items.

3

ElementAt

emit only item at n index emitted by an Observable.

4

Filter

Emits only those items which pass the given predicate function.

5

First

Emits the first item or first item which passed the given criteria.

6

IgnoreElements

Do not emits any items from Observable but marks completion.

7

Last

Emits the last element from Observable.

8

Sample

Emits the most recent item with given time interval.

9

Skip

Skips the first n items from an Observable.

10

SkipLast

Skips the last n items from an Observable.

11

Take

takes the first n items from an Observable.

12

TakeLast

takes the last n items from an Observable.

Filtering Operator Example

Create the following Java program using any editor of your choice in, say, C:> RxJava.

ObservableTester.java

import io.reactivex.Observable;
//Using take operator to filter an Observable
public class ObservableTester  {
   public static void main(String[] args) {    
      String[] letters = {"a", "b", "c", "d", "e", "f", "g"};
      final StringBuilder result = new StringBuilder();
      Observable<String> observable = Observable.fromArray(letters);
      observable
         .take(2)
         .subscribe( letter -> result.append(letter));
      System.out.println(result);
   }
}

Verify the Result

Compile the class using javac compiler as follows −

C:RxJava>javac ObservableTester.java

Now run the ObservableTester as follows −

C:RxJava>java ObservableTester

It should produce the following output −

ab

RxJava – Combining Operators

Following are the operators which are used to create a single Observable from multiple Observables.

Sr.No. Operator & Description
1 And/Then/When

Combine item sets using Pattern and Plan intermediaries.

2 CombineLatest

Combine the latest item emitted by each Observable via a specified function and emit resulted item.

3 Join

Combine items emitted by two Observables if emitted during time-frame of second Observable emitted item.

4 Merge

Combines the items emitted of Observables.

5 StartWith

Emit a specified sequence of items before starting to emit the items from the source Observable

6 Switch

Emits the most recent items emitted by Observables.

7 Zip

Combines items of Observables based on function and emits the resulted items.

Combining Operator Example

Create the following Java program using any editor of your choice in, say, C:> RxJava.

ObservableTester.java

import io.reactivex.Observable;
//Using combineLatest operator to combine Observables
public class ObservableTester {
   public static void main(String[] args) {    
      Integer[] numbers = { 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6};
      String[] letters = {"a", "b", "c", "d", "e", "f", "g"};
      final StringBuilder result = new StringBuilder();
      Observable<String> observable1 = Observable.fromArray(letters);
      Observable<Integer> observable2 = Observable.fromArray(numbers);
      Observable.combineLatest(observable1, observable2, (a,b) -> a + b)
         .subscribe( letter -> result.append(letter));
      System.out.println(result);
   }
}

Verify the Result

Compile the class using javac compiler as follows −

C:RxJava>javac ObservableTester.java

Now run the ObservableTester as follows −

C:RxJava>java ObservableTester

It should produce the following output −

g1g2g3g4g5g6

RxJava – Utility Operators

Following are the operators which are often useful with Observables.

Sr.No. Operator & Description
1

Delay

Register action to handle Observable life-cycle events.

2

Materialize/Dematerialize

Represents item emitted and notification sent.

3

ObserveOn

Specify the scheduler to be observed.

4

Serialize

Force Observable to make serialized calls.

5

Subscribe

Operate upon the emissions of items and notifications like complete from an Observable

6

SubscribeOn

Specify the scheduler to be used by an Observable when it is subscribed to.

7

TimeInterval

Convert an Observable to emit indications of the amount of time elapsed between emissions.

8

Timeout

Issues error notification if specified time occurs without emitting any item.

9

Timestamp

Attach timestamp to each item emitted.

9

Using

Creates a disposable resource or same lifespan as that of Observable.

Utility Operator Example

Create the following Java program using any editor of your choice in, say, C:> RxJava.

ObservableTester.java

import io.reactivex.Observable;
//Using subscribe operator to subscribe to an Observable
public class ObservableTester  {
   public static void main(String[] args) {    
      String[] letters = {"a", "b", "c", "d", "e", "f", "g"};
      final StringBuilder result = new StringBuilder();
      Observable<String> observable = Observable.fromArray(letters);
      observable.subscribe( letter -> result.append(letter));
      System.out.println(result);
   }
}

Verify the Result

Compile the class using javac compiler as follows −

C:RxJava>javac ObservableTester.java

Now run the ObservableTester as follows −

C:RxJava>java ObservableTester

It should produce the following output −

abcdefg

RxJava – Conditional Operators

Following are the operators which evaluates one or multiple Observables or items emitted.

Sr.No. Operator & Description
1

All

Evaluates all items emitted to meet given criteria.

2

Amb

Emits all items from the first Observable only given multiple Observables.

3

Contains

Checks if an Observable emits a particular item or not.

4

DefaultIfEmpty

Emits default item if Observable do not emit anything.

5

SequenceEqual

Checks if two Observables emit the same sequence of items.

6

SkipUntil

Discards items emitted by first Observable until a second Observable emits an item.

7

SkipWhile

Discard items emitted by an Observable until a given condition becomes false.

8

TakeUntil

Discards items emitted by an Observable after a second Observable emits an item or terminates.

9

TakeWhile

Discard items emitted by an Observable after a specified condition becomes false.

Conditional Operator Example

Create the following Java program using any editor of your choice in, say, C:> RxJava.

ObservableTester.java

import io.reactivex.Observable;
//Using defaultIfEmpty operator to operate on an Observable
public class ObservableTester  {
   public static void main(String[] args) {    
      final StringBuilder result = new StringBuilder();
      Observable.empty()
      .defaultIfEmpty("No Data")
      .subscribe(s -> result.append(s));
      System.out.println(result);
      String[] letters = {"a", "b", "c", "d", "e", "f", "g"};
      final StringBuilder result1 = new StringBuilder();
      Observable.fromArray(letters)
      .firstElement()
      .defaultIfEmpty("No data")   
      .subscribe(s -> result1.append(s));
      System.out.println(result1);
   }
}

Verify the Result

Compile the class using javac compiler as follows −

C:RxJava>javac ObservableTester.java

Now run the ObservableTester as follows −

C:RxJava>java ObservableTester

It should produce the following output −

No Data
a

RxJava – Mathematical Operators

Following are the operators which operates on entire items emitted by an Observable.

Sr.No. Operator & Description
1

Average

Evaluates averages of all items and emit the result.

2

Concat

Emits all items from multiple Observable without interleaving.

3

Count

Counts all items and emit the result.

4

Max

Evaluates max valued item of all items and emit the result.

5

Min

Evaluates min valued item of all items and emit the result.

6

Reduce

Apply a function on each item and return the result.

7

Sum

Evaluates sum of all items and emit the result.

Mathematical Operator Example

Create the following Java program using any editor of your choice in, say, C:> RxJava.

ObservableTester.java

import io.reactivex.Observable;
//Using concat operator to operate on multiple Observables
public class ObservableTester  {
   public static void main(String[] args)  throws InterruptedException {    
      Integer[] numbers = { 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6};
      String[] letters = {"a", "b", "c", "d", "e", "f", "g"};
      final StringBuilder result = new StringBuilder();
      Observable<String> observable1 = Observable.fromArray(letters);
      Observable<Integer> observable2 = Observable.fromArray(numbers);
      Observable.concat(observable1, observable2)
         .subscribe( letter -> result.append(letter));
      System.out.println(result);
   }
}

Verify the Result

Compile the class using javac compiler as follows −

C:RxJava>javac ObservableTester.java

Now run the ObservableTester as follows −

C:RxJava>java ObservableTester

It should produce the following output −

abcdefg123456

RxJava – Connectable Operators

Following are the operators which has more precisely control over subscription.

Sr.No. Operator & Description
1

Connect

Instruct a connectable Observable to emit items to its subscribers.

2

Publish

Converts an Observable to connectable Observable.

3

RefCount

Converts a connectable Observable to ordinary Observable.

4

Replay

Ensure same sequence of emitted items to be seen by each subscriber, even after the Observable has begun emitting items and subscribers subscribe later.

Connectable Operator Example

Create the following Java program using any editor of your choice in, say, C:> RxJava.

ObservableTester.java

import io.reactivex.Observable;
import io.reactivex.observables.ConnectableObservable;
//Using connect operator on a ConnectableObservable
public class ObservableTester {
   public static void main(String[] args) {
      String[] letters = {"a", "b", "c", "d", "e", "f", "g"};
      final StringBuilder result = new StringBuilder();
      ConnectableObservable<String> connectable = Observable.fromArray(letters).publish();      
      connectable.subscribe(letter -> result.append(letter));
      System.out.println(result.length());
      connectable.connect();
      System.out.println(result.length());
      System.out.println(result);
   }
}

Verify the Result

Compile the class using javac compiler as follows −

C:RxJava>javac ObservableTester.java

Now run the ObservableTester as follows −

C:RxJava>java ObservableTester

It should produce the following output −

0
7
abcdefg

RxJava – Subjects

As per the Reactive, a Subject can act as both Observable as well as Observer.

A Subject is a sort of bridge or proxy that is available in some implementations of ReactiveX that acts both as an observer and as an Observable. Because it is an observer, it can subscribe to one or more Observables, and because it is an Observable, it can pass through the items it observes by reemitting them, and it can also emit new items.

There are four types of Subjects −

Sr.No. Subject & Description
1

Publish Subject

Emits only those items which are emitted after time of subscription.

2 Replay Subject

Emits all the items emitted by source Observable regardless of when it has subscribed the Observable.

3

Behavior Subject

Upon subscription, emits the most recent item then continue to emit item emitted by the source Observable.

4

Async Subject

Emits the last item emitted by the source Observable after it”s completes emission.

RxJava – PublishSubject

PublishSubject emits items to currently subscribed Observers and terminal events to current or late Observers.

Class Declaration

Following is the declaration for io.reactivex.subjects.PublishSubject<T> class −

public final class PublishSubject<T>
extends Subject<T>

PublishSubject Example

Create the following Java program using any editor of your choice in, say, C:> RxJava.

ObservableTester.java

import io.reactivex.subjects.PublishSubject;
public class ObservableTester  {
   public static void main(String[] args) {   
      final StringBuilder result1 = new StringBuilder();
      final StringBuilder result2 = new StringBuilder();         

      PublishSubject<String> subject = PublishSubject.create(); 
      subject.subscribe(value -> result1.append(value) ); 
      subject.onNext("a"); 
      subject.onNext("b"); 
      subject.onNext("c"); 
      subject.subscribe(value -> result2.append(value)); 
      subject.onNext("d"); 
      subject.onComplete();

      //Output will be abcd 
      System.out.println(result1);
      //Output will be d only
      //as subscribed after c item emitted.
      System.out.println(result2);
   }
}

Verify the Result

Compile the class using javac compiler as follows −

C:RxJava>javac ObservableTester.java

Now run the ObservableTester as follows −

C:RxJava>java ObservableTester

It should produce the following output −

abcd
d

RxJava – BehaviorSubject

BehaviorSubject emits the most recent item it has observed and then all subsequent observed items to each subscribed Observer.

Class Declaration

Following is the declaration for io.reactivex.subjects.BehaviorSubject<T> class −

public final class BehaviorSubject<T>
extends Subject<T>

BehaviorSubject Example

Create the following Java program using any editor of your choice in, say, C:> RxJava.

ObservableTester.java

import io.reactivex.subjects.BehaviorSubject;
public class ObservableTester  {
   public static void main(String[] args) {   
      final StringBuilder result1 = new StringBuilder();
      final StringBuilder result2 = new StringBuilder();         
      BehaviorSubject<String> subject =  BehaviorSubject.create(); 
      subject.subscribe(value -> result1.append(value) ); 
      subject.onNext("a"); 
      subject.onNext("b"); 
      subject.onNext("c"); 
      subject.subscribe(value -> result2.append(value)); 
      subject.onNext("d"); 
      subject.onComplete();
      //Output will be abcd
      System.out.println(result1);
      //Output will be cd being BehaviorSubject 
      //(c is last item emitted before subscribe)
      System.out.println(result2);
   }
}

Verify the Result

Compile the class using javac compiler as follows −

C:RxJava>javac ObservableTester.java

Now run the ObservableTester as follows −

C:RxJava>java ObservableTester

It should produce the following output −

abcd
cd

RxJava – ReplaySubject

ReplaySubject replays events/items to current and late Observers.

Class Declaration

Following is the declaration for io.reactivex.subjects.ReplaySubject<T> class −

public final class ReplaySubject<T>
extends Subject<T>

ReplaySubject Example

Create the following Java program using any editor of your choice in, say, C:> RxJava.

ObservableTester.java

import io.reactivex.subjects.ReplaySubject;
public class ObservableTester  {
   public static void main(String[] args) {   
      final StringBuilder result1 = new StringBuilder();
      final StringBuilder result2 = new StringBuilder();         

      ReplaySubject<String> subject = ReplaySubject.create(); 
      subject.subscribe(value -> result1.append(value) ); 
      subject.onNext("a"); 
      subject.onNext("b"); 
      subject.onNext("c"); 
      subject.subscribe(value -> result2.append(value)); 
      subject.onNext("d"); 
      subject.onComplete();

      //Output will be abcd
      System.out.println(result1);
      //Output will be abcd being ReplaySubject
      //as ReplaySubject emits all the items
      System.out.println(result2);
   }
}

Verify the Result

Compile the class using javac compiler as follows −

C:RxJava>javac ObservableTester.java

Now run the ObservableTester as follows −

C:RxJava>java ObservableTester

It should produce the following output −

abcd
abcd

RxJava – AsyncSubject

AsyncSubject emits the only last value followed by a completion event or the received error to Observers.

Class Declaration

Following is the declaration for io.reactivex.subjects.AsyncSubject<T> class −

public final class  AsyncSubject<T>
extends Subject<T>

AsyncSubject Example

Create the following Java program using any editor of your choice in, say, C:> RxJava.

ObservableTester.java

import io.reactivex.subjects. AsyncSubject;
public class ObservableTester  {
   public static void main(String[] args) {   
      final StringBuilder result1 = new StringBuilder();
      final StringBuilder result2 = new StringBuilder();         

      AsyncSubject<String> subject =  AsyncSubject.create(); 
      subject.subscribe(value -> result1.append(value) ); 
      subject.onNext("a"); 
      subject.onNext("b"); 
      subject.onNext("c"); 
      subject.subscribe(value -> result2.append(value)); 
      subject.onNext("d"); 
      subject.onComplete();

      //Output will be d being the last item emitted
      System.out.println(result1);
      //Output will be d being the last item emitted     
      System.out.println(result2);
   }
}

Verify the Result

Compile the class using javac compiler as follows −

C:RxJava>javac ObservableTester.java

Now run the ObservableTester as follows −

C:RxJava>java ObservableTester

It should produce the following output −

d
d

RxJava – Schedulers

Schedulers are used in multi-threading environment to work with Observable operators.

As per the Reactive,Scheduler are used to schedule how chain of operators will apply to different threads.

By default, an Observable and the chain of operators that you apply to it will do its work, and will notify its observers, on the same thread on which its Subscribe method is called. The SubscribeOn operator changes this behavior by specifying a different Scheduler on which the Observable should operate. The ObserveOn operator specifies a different Scheduler that the Observable will use to send notifications to its observers.

There are following types of Schedulers available in RxJava −

Sr.No. Scheduler & Description
1

Schedulers.computation()

Creates and returns a Scheduler intended for computational work. Count of threads to be scheduled depends upon the CPUs present in the system. One thread is allowed per CPU. Best for event-loops or callback operations.

2

Schedulers.io()

Creates and returns a Scheduler intended for IO-bound work. Thread pool may extend as needed.

3

Schedulers.newThread()

Creates and returns a Scheduler that creates a new Thread for each unit of work.

4

Schedulers.trampoline()

Creates and returns a Scheduler that queues work on the current thread to be executed after the current work completes.

4

Schedulers.from(java.util.concurrent.Executor executor)

Converts an Executor into a new Scheduler instance.

RxJava – Trampoline Scheduler

Schedulers.trampoline() method creates and returns a Scheduler that queues work on the current thread to be executed after the current work completes.

Schedulers.trampoline() Example

Create the following Java program using any editor of your choice in, say, C:> RxJava.

ObservableTester.java

import java.util.Random;

import io.reactivex.Observable;
import io.reactivex.schedulers.Schedulers;

public class ObservableTester  {
   public static void main(String[] args) throws InterruptedException {
      Observable.just("A", "AB", "ABC")
         .flatMap(v -> getLengthWithDelay(v)
         .doOnNext(s -> System.out.println("Processing Thread " 
            + Thread.currentThread().getName()))
         .subscribeOn(Schedulers.trampoline()))
         .subscribe(length -> System.out.println("Receiver Thread " 
            + Thread.currentThread().getName() 
            + ", Item length " + length));

         Thread.sleep(10000);
   }
   protected static Observable<Integer> getLengthWithDelay(String v) {
      Random random = new Random();
      try {
         Thread.sleep(random.nextInt(3) * 1000);
         return Observable.just(v.length());
      } catch (InterruptedException e) {
         e.printStackTrace();
      }
      return null;
   }
}

Verify the Result

Compile the class using javac compiler as follows −

C:RxJava>javac ObservableTester.java

Now run the ObservableTester as follows −

C:RxJava>java ObservableTester

It should produce the following output −

Processing Thread main
Receiver Thread main, Item length 1
Processing Thread main
Receiver Thread main, Item length 2
Processing Thread main
Receiver Thread main, Item length 3

RxJava – NewThread Scheduler

Schedulers.newThread() method creates and returns a Scheduler that creates a new Thread for each unit of work.

Schedulers.newThread() Example

Create the following Java program using any editor of your choice in, say, C:> RxJava.

ObservableTester.java

import java.util.Random;

import io.reactivex.Observable;
import io.reactivex.schedulers.Schedulers;

public class ObservableTester  {
   public static void main(String[] args) throws InterruptedException {
      Observable.just("A", "AB", "ABC")
         .flatMap(v -> getLengthWithDelay(v)
         .doOnNext(s -> System.out.println("Processing Thread " 
            + Thread.currentThread().getName()))
         .subscribeOn(Schedulers.newThread()))
         .subscribe(length -> System.out.println("Receiver Thread " 
            + Thread.currentThread().getName() 
            + ", Item length " + length));

         Thread.sleep(10000);
   }
   protected static Observable<Integer> getLengthWithDelay(String v) {
      Random random = new Random();
      try {
         Thread.sleep(random.nextInt(3) * 1000);
         return Observable.just(v.length());
      } catch (InterruptedException e) {
         e.printStackTrace();
      }
      return null;
   }
}

Verify the Result

Compile the class using javac compiler as follows −

C:RxJava>javac ObservableTester.java

Now run the ObservableTester as follows −

C:RxJava>java ObservableTester

It should produce the following output −

Processing Thread RxNewThreadScheduler-1
Receiver Thread RxNewThreadScheduler-1, Item length 1
Processing Thread RxNewThreadScheduler-2
Receiver Thread RxNewThreadScheduler-2, Item length 2
Processing Thread RxNewThreadScheduler-3
Receiver Thread RxNewThreadScheduler-3, Item length 3

RxJava – Computation Scheduler

Schedulers.computation() method creates and returns a Scheduler intended for computational work. Count of threads to be scheduled depends upon the CPUs present in the system. One thread is allowed per CPU. Best for event-loops or callback operations.

Schedulers.computation() Example

Create the following Java program using any editor of your choice in, say, C:> RxJava.

ObservableTester.java

import java.util.Random;

import io.reactivex.Observable;
import io.reactivex.schedulers.Schedulers;

public class ObservableTester  {
   public static void main(String[] args) throws InterruptedException {
      Observable.just("A", "AB", "ABC")
         .flatMap(v -> getLengthWithDelay(v)
         .doOnNext(s -> System.out.println("Processing Thread " 
            + Thread.currentThread().getName()))
         .subscribeOn(Schedulers.computation()))
         .subscribe(length -> System.out.println("Receiver Thread " 
            + Thread.currentThread().getName() 
            + ", Item length " + length));

         Thread.sleep(10000);
   }
   protected static Observable<Integer> getLengthWithDelay(String v) {
      Random random = new Random();
      try {
         Thread.sleep(random.nextInt(3) * 1000);
         return Observable.just(v.length());
      } catch (InterruptedException e) {
         e.printStackTrace();
      }
      return null;
   }
}

Verify the Result

Compile the class using javac compiler as follows −

C:RxJava>javac ObservableTester.java

Now run the ObservableTester as follows −

C:RxJava>java ObservableTester

It should produce the following output −

Processing Thread RxComputationThreadPool-1
Receiver Thread RxComputationThreadPool-1, Item length 1
Processing Thread RxComputationThreadPool-2
Receiver Thread RxComputationThreadPool-2, Item length 2
Processing Thread RxComputationThreadPool-3
Receiver Thread RxComputationThreadPool-3, Item length 3

RxJava – IO Scheduler

Schedulers.io() method creates and returns a Scheduler intended for IO-bound work. Thread pool may extend as needed. Best for I/O intensive operations.

Schedulers.io() Example

Create the following Java program using any editor of your choice in, say, C:> RxJava.

ObservableTester.java

import java.util.Random;

import io.reactivex.Observable;
import io.reactivex.schedulers.Schedulers;

public class ObservableTester  {
   public static void main(String[] args) throws InterruptedException {
      Observable.just("A", "AB", "ABC")
         .flatMap(v -> getLengthWithDelay(v)
         .doOnNext(s -> System.out.println("Processing Thread " 
            + Thread.currentThread().getName()))
         .subscribeOn(Schedulers.io()))
         .subscribe(length -> System.out.println("Receiver Thread " 
            + Thread.currentThread().getName() 
            + ", Item length " + length));

         Thread.sleep(10000);
   }
   protected static Observable<Integer> getLengthWithDelay(String v) {
      Random random = new Random();
      try {
         Thread.sleep(random.nextInt(3) * 1000);
         return Observable.just(v.length());
      } catch (InterruptedException e) {
         e.printStackTrace();
      }
      return null;
   }
}

Verify the Result

Compile the class using javac compiler as follows −

C:RxJava>javac ObservableTester.java

Now run the ObservableTester as follows −

C:RxJava>java ObservableTester

It should produce the following output −

Processing Thread RxCachedThreadScheduler-1
Receiver Thread RxCachedThreadScheduler-1, Item length 1
Processing Thread RxCachedThreadScheduler-1
Receiver Thread RxCachedThreadScheduler-1, Item length 2
Processing Thread RxCachedThreadScheduler-1
Receiver Thread RxCachedThreadScheduler-1, Item length 3

RxJava – From Scheduler

Schedulers.from(Executor) method converts an Executor into a new Scheduler instance.

Schedulers.from(Executor) Example

Create the following Java program using any editor of your choice in, say, C:> RxJava.

ObservableTester.java

import java.util.Random;
import java.util.concurrent.Executors;

import io.reactivex.Observable;
import io.reactivex.schedulers.Schedulers;

public class ObservableTester  {
   public static void main(String[] args) throws InterruptedException {
      Observable.just("A", "AB", "ABC")
         .flatMap(v -> getLengthWithDelay(v)
         .doOnNext(s -> System.out.println("Processing Thread " 
            + Thread.currentThread().getName()))
         .subscribeOn(Schedulers.from(Executors.newFixedThreadPool(3))))
         .subscribe(length -> System.out.println("Receiver Thread " 
            + Thread.currentThread().getName() 
            + ", Item length " + length));

         Thread.sleep(10000);
   }
   protected static Observable<Integer> getLengthWithDelay(String v) {
      Random random = new Random();
      try {
         Thread.sleep(random.nextInt(3) * 1000);
         return Observable.just(v.length());
      } catch (InterruptedException e) {
         e.printStackTrace();
      }
      return null;
   }
}

Verify the Result

Compile the class using javac compiler as follows −

C:RxJava>javac ObservableTester.java

Now run the ObservableTester as follows −

C:RxJava>java ObservableTester

It should produce the following output −

Processing Thread pool-1-thread-1
Processing Thread pool-3-thread-1
Receiver Thread pool-1-thread-1, Item length 1
Processing Thread pool-4-thread-1
Receiver Thread pool-4-thread-1, Item length 3
Receiver Thread pool-3-thread-1, Item length 2

RxJava – Buffering

Buffering operator allows to gather items emitted by an Observable into a list or bundles and emit those bundles instead of items. In the example below, we”ve created an Observable to emit 9 items and using buffering, 3 items will be emitted together.

Buffering Example

Create the following Java program using any editor of your choice in, say, C:> RxJava.

ObservableTester.java

import io.reactivex.Observable;
import io.reactivex.Observer;
import io.reactivex.disposables.Disposable;
import io.reactivex.schedulers.Schedulers;

import java.util.List;
import java.util.concurrent.TimeUnit;

public class ObservableTester {
   public static void main(String[] args) throws InterruptedException {
      Observable<Integer> observable = Observable.just(1, 2, 3, 4,
         5, 6, 7, 8, 9);

      observable.subscribeOn(Schedulers.io())
         .delay(2, TimeUnit.SECONDS, Schedulers.io())
         .buffer(3)
         .subscribe(new Observer<List<Integer>>() {
            @Override
            public void onSubscribe(Disposable d) {
               System.out.println("Subscribed");
            }
            @Override
            public void onNext(List<Integer> integers) {
               System.out.println("onNext: ");
               for (Integer value : integers) {
                  System.out.println(value);
               }
            }
            @Override
            public void onError(Throwable e) {
               System.out.println("Error");
            }

            @Override
            public void onComplete() {
               System.out.println("Done! ");
            }
         });
      Thread.sleep(3000);
   }
}

Verify the Result

Compile the class using javac compiler as follows −

C:RxJava>javac ObservableTester.java

Now run the ObservableTester as follows −

C:RxJava>java ObservableTester

It should produce the following output −

Subscribed
onNext: 
1
2
3
onNext: 
4
5
6
onNext: 
7
8
9
Done! 

RxJava – Windowing

Windowing operator works similar to buffer operator but it allows to gather items emitted by an Observable into another observable instead of collection and emit those Observables instead of collections. In the example below, we”ve created an Observable to emit 9 items and using window operator, 3 Observable will be emitted together.

Windowing Example

Create the following Java program using any editor of your choice in, say, C:> RxJava.

ObservableTester.java

import io.reactivex.Observable;
import io.reactivex.Observer;
import io.reactivex.disposables.Disposable;
import io.reactivex.schedulers.Schedulers;

import java.util.concurrent.TimeUnit;

public class ObservableTester {
   public static void main(String[] args) throws InterruptedException {
      Observable<Integer> observable = Observable.just(1, 2, 3, 4,
         5, 6, 7, 8, 9);

      observable.subscribeOn(Schedulers.io())
         .delay(2, TimeUnit.SECONDS, Schedulers.io())
         .window(3)
         .subscribe(new Observer<Observable<Integer>>() {
            @Override
            public void onSubscribe(Disposable d) {
               System.out.println("Subscribed");
            }
            @Override
            public void onNext(Observable<Integer> integers) {
               System.out.println("onNext: ");
               integers.subscribe(value -> System.out.println(value));
            }
            @Override
            public void onError(Throwable e) {
               System.out.println("Error");
            }

            @Override
            public void onComplete() {
               System.out.println("Done! ");
            }
         });
      Thread.sleep(3000);
   }
}

Verify the Result

Compile the class using javac compiler as follows −

C:RxJava>javac ObservableTester.java

Now run the ObservableTester as follows −

C:RxJava>java ObservableTester

It should produce the following output −

Subscribed
onNext: 
1
2
3
onNext: 
4
5
6
onNext: 
7
8
9
Done! 

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