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Reactive Patterns with RxJS for Angular

You're reading from   Reactive Patterns with RxJS for Angular A practical guide to managing your Angular application's data reactively and efficiently using RxJS 7

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781801811514
Length 224 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Lamis Chebbi Lamis Chebbi
Author Profile Icon Lamis Chebbi
Lamis Chebbi
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Table of Contents (19) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1 – Introduction
2. Chapter 1: The Power of the Reactive Paradigm FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: RxJS 7 – The Major Features 4. Chapter 3: A Walkthrough of the Application 5. Part 2 – A Trip into Reactive Patterns
6. Chapter 4: Fetching Data as Streams 7. Chapter 5: Error Handling 8. Chapter 6: Combining Streams 9. Chapter 7: Transforming Streams 10. Part 3 – Multicasting Takes You to New Places
11. Chapter 8: Multicasting Essentials 12. Chapter 9: Caching Streams 13. Chapter 10: Sharing Data between Components 14. Chapter 11: Bulk Operations 15. Chapter 12: Processing Real-Time Updates 16. Part 4 – Final Touch
17. Chapter 13: Testing RxJS Observables 18. Other Books You May Enjoy

Exploring the bundle size improvements

Every frontend application needs a number of JavaScript files to run. These files are either the ones you have written yourself or the external dependencies used to build your application, such as MomentJS, Lodash, or RxJS. A bundle is an output of a process that merges all of these files into a few (if not single) files in the most optimized way possible.

One of the major approaches commonly used to improve frontend performance is reducing the JavaScript bundle size. The smaller the size of the JavaScript bundle, the faster a page can load up the first time and be available to users.

The RxJS core team worked on reducing the bundle size of the library in version 7; they did a lot of refactoring to optimize the code and, consequently, the bundle size.

To get a better idea, let's measure the bundle sizes of two frontend applications using RxJS 6 and RxJS 7, respectively, and compare the size of the RxJS library in both applications...

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