Disclaimer: This is a user generated content submitted by a member of the WriteUpCafe Community. The views and writings here reflect that of the author and not of WriteUpCafe. If you have any complaints regarding this post kindly report it to us.

RxJs is one of the vast topics in itself that we can write a complete article about. I have seen and read many articles with some important and limited topics with some code snippets but couldn’t find one such piece with a complete brief about it. So, here we go for something different.

Here we go::

=> The term RxJs stands for Reactive Extensions For Javascript. It allows us to work with an asynchronous data stream. It provides one core type:

I.e., Observable, and the other three types are Observer, Schedular and Subject.

Observables and Observers in RxJs

So, we use Observables to perform asynchronous operations and handle asynchronous data. We can manage asynchronous operations in Angular using either Promises or Observables. Now, what are asynchronous operations and asynchronous data? We already know that JavaScript is a single-threaded programming language, meaning the code is executed line by line.

Once one code is complete, only the next code in the program will be executed. So, if a task takes a long time in execution, we are making HTTP requests to the server. In that case, it is going to take some time. So, the next statement after that HTTP request will have to wait for its execution; it will only get executed when the HTTP request completes.

So, we can say that the synchronous code is blocking in nature, and this is because asynchronous programming comes into the picture. An asynchronous code runs in the background without stopping the execution of the code in the main thread. So, an asynchronous code is non-blocking. That means we can make HTTP requests asynchronously.

Read More : RxJs: Beginning

Login

Welcome to WriteUpCafe Community

Join our community to engage with fellow bloggers and increase the visibility of your blog.
Join WriteUpCafe