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C++ Reactive Programming

You're reading from   C++ Reactive Programming Design concurrent and asynchronous applications using the RxCpp library and Modern C++17

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788629775
Length 348 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (2):
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Peter Abraham Peter Abraham
Author Profile Icon Peter Abraham
Peter Abraham
Praseed Pai Praseed Pai
Author Profile Icon Praseed Pai
Praseed Pai
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Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Reactive Programming Model – Overview and History FREE CHAPTER 2. A Tour of Modern C++ and its Key Idioms 3. Language-Level Concurrency and Parallelism in C++ 4. Asynchronous and Lock-Free Programming in C++ 5. Introduction to Observables 6. Introduction to Event Stream Programming Using C++ 7. Introduction to Data Flow Computation and the RxCpp Library 8. RxCpp – the Key Elements 9. Reactive GUI Programming Using Qt/C++ 10. Creating Custom Operators in RxCpp 11. Design Patterns and Idioms for C++ Rx Programming 12. Reactive Microservices Using C++ 13. Advanced Streams and Handling Errors 14. Other Books You May Enjoy

Language-Level Concurrency and Parallelism in C++

C++ has had excellent support for concurrent programming ever since the C++ 11 language standard came out. Until then, threading was an affair that was handled by platform-specific libraries. The Microsoft Corporation had its own threading libraries, and other platforms (GNU Linux/macOS X) supported the POSIX threading model. A threading mechanism as part of the language has helped C++ programmers write portable code that runs on multiple platforms.

The original C++ standard was published in 1998, and the language design committee firmly believed that threading, filesystems, GUI libraries, and so on are better left to the platform-specific libraries. Herb Sutter published an influential article in the Dr. Dobbs Journal titled, The Free Lunch Is Over, where he advocated programming techniques to exploit multiple cores available...

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