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Erklärung des Begriffs: Reactive Extensions for .NET (Rx.NET)
Begriff
Reactive Extensions for .NET
Abkürzung
Rx.NET
Eintrag zuletzt aktualisiert am
03.11.2016
Zur Stichwortliste unseres Lexikons
Was ist
Reactive Extensions for .NET
?
https://github.com/Reactive-Extensions/Rx.NET
"The
Reactive Extensions
(Rx) is a library for composing asynchronous and event-based programs using observable sequences and
LINQ
-style query operators. Using Rx, developers represent asynchronous data streams with
Observable
s, query asynchronous data streams using
LINQ
operators, and parameterize the concurrency in the asynchronous data streams using Schedulers. Simply put, Rx =
Observable
s +
LINQ
+ Schedulers.
Whether you are authoring a traditional desktop or web-based application, you have to deal with asynchronous and event-based programming from time to time. Desktop applications have I/O operations and computationally expensive tasks that might take a long time to complete and potentially block other active threads. Furthermore, handling exceptions, cancellation, and synchronization is difficult and error-prone.
Using Rx, you can represent multiple asynchronous data streams (that come from diverse sources, e.g., stock quote, tweets, computer events, web service requests, etc.), and subscribe to the event stream using the IObserver<T> interface. The I
Observable
<T> interface notifies the subscribed IObserver<T> interface whenever an event occurs.
Because observable sequences are data streams, you can query them using standard
LINQ
query operators implemented by the
Observable
extension methods. Thus you can filter, project, aggregate, compose and perform time-based operations on multiple events easily by using these standard
LINQ
operators. In addition, there are a number of other reactive stream specific operators that allow powerful queries to be written. Cancellation, exceptions, and synchronization are also handled gracefully by using the extension methods provided by Rx."
Querverweise zu anderen Begriffen im Lexikon
siehe
Rx.NET Rx.NET
Reactive Extensions (ReactiveX)
Observable
Language Integrated Query (LINQ)
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