ECMAScript Observable
This proposal introduces an Observable type to the ECMAScript standard library.
The Observable type can be used to model push-based data sources such as DOM
events, timer intervals, and sockets. In addition, observables are:
- Compositional: Observables can be composed with higher-order combinators.
- Lazy: Observables do not start emitting data until an observer has subscribed.
Example: Observing Keyboard Events
Using the Observable constructor, we can create a function which returns an
observable stream of events for an arbitrary DOM element and event type.
function listen(element, eventName) {
return new Observable(observer => {
let handler = event => observer.next(event);
element.addEventListener(eventName, handler, true);
return () => {
element.removeEventListener(eventName, handler, true);
};
});
}
We can then use standard combinators to filter and map the events in the stream,
just like we would with an array.
function commandKeys(element) {
let keyCommands = { "38": "up", "40": "down" };
return listen(element, "keydown")
.filter(event => event.keyCode in keyCommands)
.map(event => keyCommands[event.keyCode])
}
Note: The "filter" and "map" methods are not included in this proposal. They may
be added in a future version of this specification.
When we want to consume the event stream, we subscribe with an observer.
let subscription = commandKeys(inputElement).subscribe({
next(val) { console.log("Received key command: " + val) },
error(err) { console.log("Received an error: " + err) },
complete() { console.log("Stream complete") },
});
The object returned by subscribe will allow us to cancel the subscription at any time.
Upon cancelation, the Observable's cleanup function will be executed.
subscription.unsubscribe();
Motivation
The Observable type represents one of the fundamental protocols for processing asynchronous
streams of data. It is particularly effective at modeling streams of data which originate
from the environment and are pushed into the application, such as user interface events. By
offering Observable as a component of the ECMAScript standard library, we allow platforms
and applications to share a common push-based stream protocol.
Implementations
Running Tests
To run the unit tests, install the es-observable-tests package into your project.
npm install es-observable-tests
Then call the exported runTests
function with the constructor you want to test.
require("es-observable-tests").runTests(MyObservable);
API
Observable
An Observable represents a sequence of values which may be observed.
interface Observable {
constructor(subscriber : SubscriberFunction);
subscribe(observer : Observer) : Subscription;
subscribe(onNext : Function,
onError? : Function,
onComplete? : Function) : Subscription;
[Symbol.observable]() : Observable;
static of(...items) : Observable;
static from(observable) : Observable;
}
interface Subscription {
unsubscribe() : void;
get closed() : Boolean;
}
function SubscriberFunction(observer: SubscriptionObserver) : (void => void)|Subscription;
Observable.of
Observable.of
creates an Observable of the values provided as arguments. The values
are delivered synchronously when subscribe
is called.
Observable.of("red", "green", "blue").subscribe({
next(color) {
console.log(color);
}
});
Observable.from
Observable.from
converts its argument to an Observable.
- If the argument has a
Symbol.observable
method, then it returns the result of
invoking that method. If the resulting object is not an instance of Observable,
then it is wrapped in an Observable which will delegate subscription. - Otherwise, the argument is assumed to be an iterable and the iteration values are
delivered synchronously when
subscribe
is called.
Converting from an object which supports Symbol.observable
to an Observable:
Observable.from({
[Symbol.observable]() {
return new Observable(observer => {
setTimeout(() => {
observer.next("hello");
observer.next("world");
observer.complete();
}, 2000);
});
}
}).subscribe({
next(value) {
console.log(value);
}
});
let observable = new Observable(observer => {});
Observable.from(observable) === observable;
Converting from an iterable to an Observable:
Observable.from(["mercury", "venus", "earth"]).subscribe({
next(value) {
console.log(value);
}
});
Observer
An Observer is used to receive data from an Observable, and is supplied as an
argument to subscribe.
All methods are optional.
interface Observer {
start(subscription : Subscription);
next(value);
error(errorValue);
complete();
}
SubscriptionObserver
A SubscriptionObserver is a normalized Observer which wraps the observer object supplied to
subscribe.
interface SubscriptionObserver {
next(value);
error(errorValue);
complete();
get closed() : Boolean;
}