I’m new to reactive programming and toying around with cycle.js, trying to implement who to follow box from this tutorial. But I understood that for proper implementation (and learning purposes) I don’t have one piece of data: full user name. I can get it by sequentially getting users and then full user data from server. In imperative style I would do something like this:
fetch(``)
.then(data => data.json())
.then(users => fetch(users[0].url))
.then(data => data.json())
.then(/* ... work with data ... */)
But how do I do it in cycle? I’m using fetch driver and trying something like this:
function main({ DOM, HTTP }) {
const users = ``;
const refresh$ = DOM.select(`.refresh`).events(`click`)
const response$ = getJSON({ key: `users` }, HTTP)
const userUrl$ = response$
.map(users => ({
url: R.prop(`url`, R.head(users)),
key: `user`,
}))
.startWith(null)
const request$ = refresh$
.startWith(`initial`)
.map(_ => ({
url: `${users}?since=${random(500)}`,
key: `users`,
}))
.merge(userUrl$)
const dom$ = ...
return {
DOM: dom$,
HTTP: request$,
};
}
where getJSON
is
function getJSON(by, requests$) {
const type = capitalize(firstKey(by));
return requests$
[`by${type}`](firstVal(by))
.mergeAll()
.flatMap(res => res.json());
And I’m always getting some cryptic (for me) error like: TypeError: Already read
. What does it mean and how do I handle it properly?
I’m new to reactive programming and toying around with cycle.js, trying to implement who to follow box from this tutorial. But I understood that for proper implementation (and learning purposes) I don’t have one piece of data: full user name. I can get it by sequentially getting users and then full user data from server. In imperative style I would do something like this:
fetch(`https://api.github./users`)
.then(data => data.json())
.then(users => fetch(users[0].url))
.then(data => data.json())
.then(/* ... work with data ... */)
But how do I do it in cycle? I’m using fetch driver and trying something like this:
function main({ DOM, HTTP }) {
const users = `https://api.github./users`;
const refresh$ = DOM.select(`.refresh`).events(`click`)
const response$ = getJSON({ key: `users` }, HTTP)
const userUrl$ = response$
.map(users => ({
url: R.prop(`url`, R.head(users)),
key: `user`,
}))
.startWith(null)
const request$ = refresh$
.startWith(`initial`)
.map(_ => ({
url: `${users}?since=${random(500)}`,
key: `users`,
}))
.merge(userUrl$)
const dom$ = ...
return {
DOM: dom$,
HTTP: request$,
};
}
where getJSON
is
function getJSON(by, requests$) {
const type = capitalize(firstKey(by));
return requests$
[`by${type}`](firstVal(by))
.mergeAll()
.flatMap(res => res.json());
And I’m always getting some cryptic (for me) error like: TypeError: Already read
. What does it mean and how do I handle it properly?
2 Answers
Reset to default 9You were quite close. You just need to remove startWith(null)
as a request, and grabbing the second response (you were missing the getJSON for that one).
function main({ DOM, HTTP }) {
const usersAPIPath = `https://api.github./users`;
const refresh$ = DOM.select(`.refresh`).events(`click`);
const userResponse$ = getJSON({ key: `user` }, HTTP);
const listResponse$ = getJSON({ key: `users` }, HTTP);
const userRequest$ = listResponse$
.map(users => ({
url: R.prop(`url`, R.head(users)),
key: `user`,
}));
const listRequest$ = refresh$
.startWith(`initial`)
.map(_ => ({
url: `${usersAPIPath}?since=${Math.round(Math.random()*500)}`,
key: `users`,
}));
const dom$ = userResponse$.map(res => h('div', JSON.stringify(res)));
return {
DOM: dom$,
HTTP: listRequest$.merge(userRequest$),
};
}
Because inquiring minds want to know...here's a plete working example:
import Cycle from '@cycle/rx-run';
import {div, button, makeDOMDriver} from '@cycle/dom';
import {makeFetchDriver} from '@cycle/fetch';
import R from 'ramda'
function main({DOM, HTTP}) {
const usersAPIPath = 'https://api.github./users';
const refresh$ = DOM.select('button').events('click');
const userResponse$ = getJSON({ key: 'user' }, HTTP);
const listResponse$ = getJSON({ key: 'users' }, HTTP);
const userRequest$ = listResponse$
.map(users => ({
url: R.prop('url', R.head(users)),
key: 'user',
}));
const listRequest$ = refresh$
.startWith('initial')
.map(_ => ({
url: `${usersAPIPath}?since=${Math.round(Math.random()*500)}`,
key: 'users',
}));
const dom$ = userResponse$.map(res => div([
button('Refresh'),
div(JSON.stringify(res))
]));
return {
DOM: dom$,
HTTP: listRequest$.merge(userRequest$)
};
function getJSON(by, requests$) {
return requests$.byKey(by.key)
.mergeAll()
.flatMap(res => res.json());
}
}
Cycle.run(main, {
DOM: makeDOMDriver('#main-container'),
HTTP: makeFetchDriver()
});
It took me a while to figure out HTTP
was the @cycle/fetch
driver, and NOT the @cycle/http
driver. Next, a bit of searching turned the ramda
npm library providing prop
and head
methods.