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I have a method, getObs(), that returns an observable, which should be shared by all callers. However, that observable might not exist when somebody calls getObs(), and creating it is an async operation, so my idea was to return a placeholder observable that is replaced with the real observable once it is created.

My basic attempt goes something like this:

var createSubject = new Rx.Subject();
var placeholder = createSubject.switchLatest();

Where I can return placeholder if the real observable does not exist when 'getObs()' is called. When the real observable is created, I use createSubject.onNext(realObservable), which then passes it to switchLatest() that unwraps it for any subscribers.

However, it does seem like overkill to use a Subject and switchLatest for this purpose, so I am wondering if there is a more direct solution?

2 Answers 2

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If the act of getting the observable itself is asynchronous, you should model that also as an observable.

For example...

var getObsAsync = function () {
    return Rx.Observable.create(function (observer) {
        var token = startSomeAsyncAction(function (result) {
                // the async action has completed!
                var obs = Rx.Observable.fromArray(result.dataArray);
                token = undefined;
                observer.OnNext(obs);
                observer.OnCompleted();
            }),
            unsubscribeAction = function () {
                if (asyncAction) {
                    stopSomeAsyncAction(token);
                }
            };            

        return unsubscribeAction;
    });
};

var getObs = function () { return getObsAsync().switchLatest(); };

And if you want to share a single instance of that observable, but you do not wish to get the observable until someone actually subscribes, then you do:

// source must be a Connectable Observable (ie the result of Publish or Replay)
// will connect the observable the first time an observer subscribes
// If an action is supplied, then it will call the action with a disposable
// that can be used to disconnect the observable.
// idea taken from Rxx project
Rx.Observable.prototype.prime = function (action) {
    var source = this;
    if (!(source instanceof Rx.Observable) || !source.connect) {
        throw new Error("source must be a connectable observable");
    }

    var connection = undefined;
    return Rx.Observable.createWithDisposable(function (observer) {
        var subscription = source.subscribe(observer);

        if (!connection) {
            // this is the first observer.  Connect the underlying observable.
            connection = source.connect();
            if (action) {
                // Call action with a disposable that will disconnect and reset our state
                var disconnect = function() {
                    connection.dispose();
                    connection = undefined;
                };
                action(Rx.Disposable.create(disconnect));
            }
        }

        return subscription;
    });
};

var globalObs = Rx.Observable.defer(getObs).publish().prime();

Now code wherever can just use globalObs and not worry about it:

// location 1
globalObs.subscribe(...);

// location 2
globalObs.select(...)...subscribe(...);

Notice, that no one actually even needs to call getObs because you just setup a global observable that will (via defer) call getObs for you when someone subscribes.

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  • awesome answer as always. You really know your stuff. Can you explain the difference between prime and refCount? Jul 9, 2013 at 17:40
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    refCount - keeps a count of the number of observers. When count goes from 0 to 1, it connects to the source. When count goes from 1 to 0, it disconnects. So, if your observers come and go and your observable is cold, then if all of the observers unsubscribe, it sort of resets the observable so that the next observer will cause the cold observable to "start over".
    – Brandon
    Jul 9, 2013 at 18:43
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    prime - when count goes from 0 to 1, it connects to the source. After that, it never disconnects even if all the observers unsubscribe. The only way it would disconnect would be if you supplied a function argument to prime() so you could capture the disposable that represents the connection. Then you could disconnect it whenever you wanted.
    – Brandon
    Jul 9, 2013 at 18:44
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    In the examples above, if you used refCount, then whenever all of the observers unsubscribed, the observable you received from your async method would be shutdown. When a new observer finally subscribed, a new call to getObs would be made and a new observable started to be shared to the new observers. That may actually be what you want. I don't know. Using prime would ensure only 1 call to getObs was ever made and events would just get "lost" if all the observers unsubscribed for a while.
    – Brandon
    Jul 9, 2013 at 18:46
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You can use a subject to hook up the source after the fact:

var placeholder = new Subject<YourType>();
// other code can now subscribe to placeholder, best expose it as IObservable

when the source is created:

var asyncCreatedObs = new ...;
placeholder.Subscribe(asyncCreatedObs);
// subscribers of placeholder start to see asyncCreatedObs 
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  • Oh, I see you are on JS... The code is for C#. Guess the syntax is a little different for JS, the concepts should be the same tho.
    – 3dGrabber
    Jul 9, 2013 at 14:58

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