I have a question about the subscribe(on:options:) operator. I would appreciate if anyone can help me to figure it out.
So what we have from the documentation:
Specifies the scheduler on which to perform subscribe, cancel, and request operations. In contrast with receive(on:options:), which affects downstream messages, subscribe(on:options:) changes the execution context of upstream messages.
Also, what I got from different articles is that unless we explicitly specify the Scheduler
to receive our downstream messages on (using receive(on:options:)
), messages will be send on the Scheduler
used for receiving a subscription.
This information is not aligned with what I am actually getting during the execution.
I have the next code:
Just("Some text")
.map { _ in
print("Map: \(Thread.isMainThread)")
}
.subscribe(on: DispatchQueue.global())
.sink { _ in
print("Sink: \(Thread.isMainThread)")
}
.store(in: &subscriptions)
I would expect next output:
Map: false
Sink: false
But instead I am getting:
Map: true
Sink: false
The same thing happens when I use Sequence
publisher.
If I swap the position of map
operator and subscribe
operator, I receive what I want:
Just("Some text")
.subscribe(on: DispatchQueue.global())
.map { _ in
print("Map: \(Thread.isMainThread)")
}
.sink { _ in
print("Sink: \(Thread.isMainThread)")
}
.store(in: &subscriptions)
Output:
Map: false
Sink: false
Interesting fact is that when I use the same order of operators from my first listing with my custom publisher, I receive the behaviour I want:
struct TestJust<Output>: Publisher {
typealias Failure = Never
private let value: Output
init(_ output: Output) {
self.value = output
}
func receive<S>(subscriber: S) where S : Subscriber, Failure == S.Failure, Output == S.Input {
subscriber.receive(subscription: Subscriptions.empty)
_ = subscriber.receive(value)
subscriber.receive(completion: .finished)
}
}
TestJust("Some text")
.map { _ in
print("Map: \(Thread.isMainThread)")
}
.subscribe(on: DispatchQueue.global())
.sink { _ in
print("Sink: \(Thread.isMainThread)")
}
.store(in: &subscriptions)
Output:
Map: false
Sink: false
So I think there is either my total misunderstanding of all these mechanisms, or some publishers intentionally choose the thread to publish values (Just
, Sequence
-> Main
, URLSession.DataTaskPublisher
-> Some of Background
), which does not make sense for me, cause in this case why would we need this subscribe(on:options:)
for.
Could you please help me to understand what am I missing? Thank you in advance.