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PHP Reactive Programming

You're reading from   PHP Reactive Programming Build fault tolerant and high performing application in PHP based on the reactive architecture

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781786462879
Length 364 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Martin Sikora Martin Sikora
Author Profile Icon Martin Sikora
Martin Sikora
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Table of Contents (12) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introduction to Reactive Programming FREE CHAPTER 2. Reactive Programming with RxPHP 3. Writing a Reddit Reader with RxPHP 4. Reactive versus a Typical Event-Driven Approach 5. Testing RxPHP Code 6. PHP Streams API and Higher-Order Observables 7. Implementing Socket IPC and WebSocket Server/Client 8. Multicasting in RxPHP and PHP7 pthreads Extension 9. Multithreaded and Distributed Computing with pthreads and Gearman 10. Using Advanced Operators and Techniques in RxPHP Appendix. Reusing RxPHP Techniques in RxJS

Multicasting in RxPHP


In Reactive Extensions, multicasting means sharing a single subscription among multiple observers via an instance of a Subject class. All multicasting operators are internally based on the general multicast() operator that implements their most common functionality. Of course, we're not limited to only using the Subject class and we'll use ReplaySubject and BehaviorSubject as well.

Multicasting is common to all Rx implementations, so knowledge of how it works inside is generally useful.

The multicast() operator and ConnectableObservable

The multicast() operator returns ConnectableObservable or MulticastObservable based on what arguments we pass. We'll first have a look at how it works with ConnectableObservable, because this should be very familiar to us.

A typical use case could look like the following example:

// multicast_01.php  
$observable = Rx\Observable::defer(function() { 
        printf("Observable::defer\n"); 
        return Observable::range(1...
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