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68 lines
3.4 KiB
68 lines
3.4 KiB
import { IScheduler } from '../Scheduler'; |
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import { MonoTypeOperatorFunction } from '../interfaces'; |
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/** |
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* |
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* Errors if Observable does not emit a value in given time span. |
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* |
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* <span class="informal">Timeouts on Observable that doesn't emit values fast enough.</span> |
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* |
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* <img src="./img/timeout.png" width="100%"> |
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* |
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* `timeout` operator accepts as an argument either a number or a Date. |
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* |
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* If number was provided, it returns an Observable that behaves like a source |
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* Observable, unless there is a period of time where there is no value emitted. |
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* So if you provide `100` as argument and first value comes after 50ms from |
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* the moment of subscription, this value will be simply re-emitted by the resulting |
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* Observable. If however after that 100ms passes without a second value being emitted, |
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* stream will end with an error and source Observable will be unsubscribed. |
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* These checks are performed throughout whole lifecycle of Observable - from the moment |
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* it was subscribed to, until it completes or errors itself. Thus every value must be |
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* emitted within specified period since previous value. |
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* |
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* If provided argument was Date, returned Observable behaves differently. It throws |
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* if Observable did not complete before provided Date. This means that periods between |
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* emission of particular values do not matter in this case. If Observable did not complete |
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* before provided Date, source Observable will be unsubscribed. Other than that, resulting |
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* stream behaves just as source Observable. |
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* |
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* `timeout` accepts also a Scheduler as a second parameter. It is used to schedule moment (or moments) |
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* when returned Observable will check if source stream emitted value or completed. |
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* |
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* @example <caption>Check if ticks are emitted within certain timespan</caption> |
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* const seconds = Rx.Observable.interval(1000); |
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* |
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* seconds.timeout(1100) // Let's use bigger timespan to be safe, |
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* // since `interval` might fire a bit later then scheduled. |
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* .subscribe( |
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* value => console.log(value), // Will emit numbers just as regular `interval` would. |
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* err => console.log(err) // Will never be called. |
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* ); |
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* |
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* seconds.timeout(900).subscribe( |
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* value => console.log(value), // Will never be called. |
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* err => console.log(err) // Will emit error before even first value is emitted, |
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* // since it did not arrive within 900ms period. |
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* ); |
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* |
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* @example <caption>Use Date to check if Observable completed</caption> |
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* const seconds = Rx.Observable.interval(1000); |
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* |
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* seconds.timeout(new Date("December 17, 2020 03:24:00")) |
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* .subscribe( |
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* value => console.log(value), // Will emit values as regular `interval` would |
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* // until December 17, 2020 at 03:24:00. |
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* err => console.log(err) // On December 17, 2020 at 03:24:00 it will emit an error, |
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* // since Observable did not complete by then. |
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* ); |
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* |
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* @see {@link timeoutWith} |
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* |
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* @param {number|Date} due Number specifying period within which Observable must emit values |
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* or Date specifying before when Observable should complete |
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* @param {Scheduler} [scheduler] Scheduler controlling when timeout checks occur. |
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* @return {Observable<T>} Observable that mirrors behaviour of source, unless timeout checks fail. |
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* @method timeout |
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* @owner Observable |
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*/ |
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export declare function timeout<T>(due: number | Date, scheduler?: IScheduler): MonoTypeOperatorFunction<T>;
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