1

How would I implement the functionality of async's eachSeries where you iterate over an array and manually invoke a callback to continue the iteration?

As far as I could figure out, you can iterate over an array with RxJs' Observable like this:

var array = [1,2,3,4,5];

// Converts an array to an observable sequence
var source = Rx.Observable.from(array);

// Prints out each item
var subscription = source.subscribe(
  x => console.log('onNext: %s', x),
  e => console.log('onError: %s', e),
  () => console.log('onCompleted'));

// => onNext: 1
// => onNext: 2
// => onNext: 3
// => onNext: 4
// => onNext: 5
// => onCompleted

Here the Observable emits "automatically" each array element, but how would I tell it to continue only when I need to. Like with RxJS' Subject next() method.

In fact my real world scenario is that I need to invoke an other function inside the observer callback. With async I would pass async's callback to continue the iteration to that function and invoke it from there. But I have no clue how to do that with Observables. Are they appropriate for this case anyway? Or should I stick to async?

Thanks for your help!

2
  • The entire conceptual point of Observables is to feed you data when appropriate, you don't request it. That's why you're observing, not polling.
    – ssube
    Oct 28, 2016 at 15:24
  • depends on your use case, but .concatMap should do the job like here: plnkr.co/edit/6TIO9uyuzKJu59a8WwO5?p=preview. Oct 28, 2016 at 15:31

2 Answers 2

0

You cannot make use of an iterator/generator?

It seems to be the use-case you have in mind

You could iterate it like in this example

function *iterator(source) {
  let i = 0, len = source.length;
  for (i = 0; i < len; i++) {
    yield source[i];
  }
}

var array = [1,2,3,4,5], iter = iterator( array );

var val = iter.next();
while (!val.done) {
  console.log(`${val.value} ( done? ${val.done} )` );
  val = iter.next();
}
console.log('done');

0

I think this is very close to what you need:

import {Observable, Subject} from 'rxjs';

var subject = new Subject();

var interval = setInterval(_ => {
    subject.next(null);
}, 1000);

Observable.from([1,2,3,4,5])
    .concatMap(val => Observable.of(val)
        .delayWhen(_ => subject)
        .do(val => console.log('.do:', val))
    )
    .subscribe(val => console.log('next:', val), undefined, () => clearInterval(interval));

See live demo: http://plnkr.co/edit/v77hCqOVDBqRxpWdW4Nv?p=preview

I'm using delayWhen() operator to be able to manually trigger emission of the next value. Then concatMap() waits until the previous Observable returned from the callback completes so this makes the chain to be called in correct order one by one.

Note that the initial emission of Observable.from(...) happens immediately and each item is delayed in concatMap().

This demo prints to console:

.do: 1
next: 1
.do: 2
next: 2
.do: 3
next: 3
.do: 4
next: 4
.do: 5
next: 5

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