The way I think about it is that you use flatMap
when the function you wanted to put inside of map()
returns an Observable
. In which case you might still try to use map()
but it would be unpractical. Let me try to explain why.
If in such case you decided to stick with map
, you would get an Observable<Observable<Something>>
. For example in your case, if we used an imaginary RxGson library, that returned an Observable<String>
from it's toJson()
method (instead of simply returning a String
) it would look like this:
Observable.from(jsonFile).map(new Func1<File, Observable<String>>() {
@Override public Observable<String>> call(File file) {
return new RxGson().toJson(new FileReader(file), Object.class);
}
}); // you get Observable<Observable<String>> here
At this point it would be pretty tricky to subscribe()
to such an observable. Inside of it you would get an Observable<String>
to which you would again need to subscribe()
to get the value. Which is not practical or nice to look at.
So to make it useful one idea is to "flatten" this observable of observables (you might start to see where the name _flat_Map comes from). RxJava provides a few ways to flatten observables and for sake of simplicity lets assume merge is what we want. Merge basically takes a bunch of observables and emits whenever any of them emits. (Lots of people would argue switch would be a better default. But if you're emitting just one value, it doesn't matter anyway.)
So amending our previous snippet we would get:
Observable.from(jsonFile).map(new Func1<File, Observable<String>>() {
@Override public Observable<String>> call(File file) {
return new RxGson().toJson(new FileReader(file), Object.class);
}
}).merge(); // you get Observable<String> here
This is a lot more useful, because subscribing to that (or mapping, or filtering, or...) you just get the String
value. (Also, mind you, such variant of merge()
does not exist in RxJava, but if you understand the idea of merge then I hope you also understand how that would work.)
So basically because such merge()
should probably only ever be useful when it succeeds a map()
returning an observable and so you don't have to type this over and over again, flatMap()
was created as a shorthand. It applies the mapping function just as a normal map()
would, but later instead of emitting the returned values it also "flattens" (or merges) them.
That's the general use case. It is most useful in a codebase that uses Rx allover the place and you've got many methods returning observables, which you want to chain with other methods returning observables.
In your use case it happens to be useful as well, because map()
can only transform one value emitted in onNext()
into another value emitted in onNext()
. But it cannot transform it into multiple values, no value at all or an error. And as akarnokd wrote in his answer (and mind you he's much smarter than me, probably in general, but at least when it comes to RxJava) you shouldn't throw exceptions from your map()
. So instead you can use flatMap()
and
return Observable.just(value);
when all goes well, but
return Observable.error(exception);
when something fails.
See his answer for a complete snippet: https://stackoverflow.com/a/30330772/1402641