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Reactive Programming with Swift 4

You're reading from   Reactive Programming with Swift 4 Build asynchronous reactive applications with easy-to-maintain and clean code using RxSwift and Xcode 9

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781787120211
Length 320 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Navdeep Singh Navdeep Singh
Author Profile Icon Navdeep Singh
Navdeep Singh
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Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Migrating from Swift 3 to Swift 4 2. FRP Fundamentals, Terminology, and Basic Building Blocks FREE CHAPTER 3. Set up RxSwift and Convert a Basic Login App to its RxSwift Counterpart 4. When to Become Reactive? 5. Filter, Transform, and Simplify 6. Reduce by Combining and Filtering and Common Trade Offs 7. React to UI Events – Start Subscribing 8. RxTest and Custom Rx Extensions – Testing with Rx 9. Testing Your RxCode – Testing Asynchronous Code 10. Schedule Your Tasks, Don't Queue! 11. Subscribe to Errors and Save Your App 12. Functional and Reactive App-Architecture 13. Finish a Real-World Application 14. Other Books You May Enjoy

Schedule Your Tasks, Don't Queue!

As we already covered in the previous chapters, an Observable and the operators that we use on it will execute and notify the observer on the same thread on which the subscribe operator is used. So far, we have done a lot of work on the main thread. Schedulers are an abstraction that lets us specify distinct queues on which to perform the work. It is always a good idea to move intensive work off the main thread to keep the app responsive for users. Schedulers make it easy to do this.

Scheduler can be serial or concurrent. We use serial schedulers if we want to ensure that the work is carried out on that queue in the order in which it was added to the queue. Otherwise, we can just use a concurrent queue. In this chapter, we will learn about the following topics:

  • Queues and schedulers
  • Scheduler Singletons
  • ConcurrentDispatchQueueScheduler
  • SerialDispatchQueueScheduler...
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