1

I have been making my web request like this:

public IObservable<Foo> GetFoo(string fooId)
{
    var uri = /* set up the GET query parameters here */;

    return Observable.Create<Foo>(
        obs => new HttpClient().GetAsync(uri)
            .ToObservable()
            .Subscribe(response =>
            {
                try
                {
                    response.EnsureSuccessStatusCode();

                    response.Content.ReadAsStringAsync()
                        .ToObservable()
                        .Select(JObject.Parse)
                        .Select(json => new Foo(json))
                        .Subscribe(foo =>
                        {
                            obs.OnNext(foo);
                            obs.OnCompleted();
                        });
                }
                catch (Exception e)
                {
                    obs.OnError(e);
                }
            }));

}

However, I feel that as a relative newcomer to Rx, I might be missing some way of simplifying what I've written. It seems the outer Observable is just a wrapper around the inner one, and I could (somehow) expose that, instead --I just don't know how.

1 Answer 1

9

Give this a go:

return Observable.Defer(() => HttpClient().GetAsync(uri))
    .SelectMany(async x => { x.EnsureSuccessStatusCode(); return x.Content.ReadAsStringAsync(); })
    .Select(JObject.Parse)
    .Select(json => new Foo(json));

The Observable.Defer here makes it match the semantics of your original method wrt subscriptions (i.e. you subscribe twice, you make 2 HTTP requests).

8
  • Observable.Using would make this perfect. Dec 9, 2013 at 4:03
  • @CoryNelson, how would Using improve this?
    – moswald
    Dec 9, 2013 at 4:07
  • 2
    I prefer Observable.FromAsync to Observable.Defer - no functional difference but it makes the code slightly more readable to me. It does have overloads for mapping subscription disposal to cancellation tokens, but you can also find these on Observable.DeferAsync. Dec 9, 2013 at 11:12
  • 1
    @JamesWorld Thanks, I agree that FromAsync is more readable. It also removes the warning about an awaitable being ignored.
    – moswald
    Dec 9, 2013 at 18:40
  • 1
    hwhoops, I fixed the warning, but FromAsync works great too :)
    – Ana Betts
    Dec 10, 2013 at 1:11

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