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@@ -2,6 +2,7 @@
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import mongoose, { Model } from "mongoose";
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import { Subject, from, map, of, interval, buffer, asyncScheduler, observeOn, takeUntil, delay, queueScheduler, bufferWhen } from "rxjs";
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+import { queryService } from "../services/query.service";
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const used = process.memoryUsage();
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let MongooseConnection: mongoose.Connection
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@@ -88,13 +89,8 @@ function handlers(element: any) {
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}, randomInt * 1000)
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}
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function printLog() {
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- const t0 = performance.now()
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- let i
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- for (i = 0; i <= 6000000000; i++) {
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- }
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- const t1 = performance.now()
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- const timeTakenInSeconds = (t1 - t0) / 1000;
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- console.log(`Time taken: ${timeTakenInSeconds} seconds to run this printLog()`);
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+ let service = new queryService()
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+ service.callFromOtherClass()
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}
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/* Explanation: So the producer will emit 1 data very 1 second indefinitely. For the consumer, when they subscribes to the producer, the data will be consumed.
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@@ -102,8 +98,8 @@ So when the producer emits data, the next method of the consumer is called, and
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1.The console.log() statement logs the received data to the console. This task is synchronous and is executed immediately.
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2.The handler1() function is called with the received data as an argument. This task is asynchronous and is added to the event queue.
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-3.The then() method of the Promise returned by handler1() is called with a callback function as an argument. This task is also asynchronous and is added to the event queue.
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-4.The printLog() function is called. This task is synchronous and is executed immediately.
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+The then() method of the Promise returned by handler1() is called with a callback function as an argument. This task is also asynchronous and is added to the event queue.
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+3.The printLog() function is called. This task is synchronous and is executed immediately.
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After all synchronous tasks in the call stack are completed, the asynchronous tasks in the event queue are executed one by one, starting with the handler1() function call
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and followed by the then() callback function call.*/
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@@ -116,17 +112,56 @@ function understandingOBS() {
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handler1(element).then((data) => { // asynchronous
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handler2(data) // setTimeout will put the call into the call stack
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})
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- printLog() // synchronous: this must complete before the next data to be received
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+ printLog()
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}
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})
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}
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/* Buffer */
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-let bufferring = publishDataEverySecond.pipe(buffer(control)) // standard buffer
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-let buffered = publishDataEverySecond.pipe( // using buffer when
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- bufferWhen(() => interval(1000 + Math.random() * 4000))
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-);
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function bufferOBS() {
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+ /* This code defines a function called bufferOBS that creates a new observable called bufferring using
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+ the buffer operator. The buffer operator collects all the emissions from the source observable (publishDataEverySecond)
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+ into an array and emits the array each time a notification is emitted from the control observable (control).
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+
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+ The buffer operator takes the control observable as a parameter. In this case, control is not defined in
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+ the code snippet you provided, but it should be an observable that emits a notification to trigger the buffer emission.
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+
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+ After creating the bufferring observable, the code subscribes to it using the subscribe method. The subscribe
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+ method takes a callback function that is invoked each time an element is emitted from the bufferring observable.
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+
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+ Inside the callback function, we log the received data using console.log. We then call handler1 with the received
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+ data and chain a then operator to handle the result. In the then block, we call handler2 with the transformed data. */
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+ let bufferring = publishDataEverySecond.pipe(buffer(control)) // standard buffer
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+ bufferring.subscribe((element) => {
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+ console.log(`Data received: ${element}`)
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+ handler1(element).then((data) => {
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+ handler2(data)
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+ })
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+ })
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+}
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+
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+function bufferWhenOBS() {
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+ let buffered = publishDataEverySecond.pipe(
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+ /* This code creates a buffered observable that buffers emissions from publishDataEverySecond.
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+ The bufferWhen operator is used to determine when to buffer data. In this case, it uses the
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+ interval operator to emit a value every random time between 1000 and 5000 milliseconds. This
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+ means that every 1 to 5 seconds, the buffered observable will emit an array of the buffered values. */
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+ bufferWhen(() => interval(1000 + Math.random() * 4000))
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+ );
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+
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+ /* This code defines a function bufferOBS that subscribes to the buffered observable and processes the
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+ buffered data by calling handler1 and handler2 on each element. When new data arrives, the next callback
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+ is invoked with an array of the buffered values.
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+
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+ Inside the next callback, we log the received data using console.log. We then call handler1 with the
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+ received data and chain a then operator to handle the result. In the then block, we call handler2
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+ with the transformed data.
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+
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+ Overall, this code sets up a pipeline of RxJS operators to create a buffered observable that buffers
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+ emissions from the source observable for a certain amount of time. It then processes the buffered
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+ data using the handler1 and handler2 functions. This is useful when you want to group emissions
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+ from a source observable and process them together, for example, to reduce network traffic or to
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+ process data in batches. */
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buffered.subscribe({
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next(element) {
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console.log(`Data received: ${element}`)
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@@ -138,15 +173,41 @@ function bufferOBS() {
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}
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/* Scheduler */
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-let scheduler = publishDataEverySecond.pipe(observeOn(asyncScheduler)) //async scheduler
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-let source$ = interval(1000, queueScheduler); // queue scheduler
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-let result$ = source$.pipe(takeUntil(control))
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-function scheduleOBS() {
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- result$.subscribe({
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- next: element => {
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- console.log(`Scheduler: ${element}`)
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- }
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- })
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+function asyncScheduleOBS() {
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+ const scheduleObservable = of(`Hello Observable passing through`)
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+ const delayTime = 3000;
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+ /* In this example, the source$ observable emits the value "Hello, RxJS!". We pass the source$ observable\
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+ as a parameter to the task function, which is executed after a delay of 1 second using the asyncScheduler.
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+ Inside the task function, we subscribe to the source$ observable and log its emitted values to the console.
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+ By using an observable as the task parameter, you can create complex logic that can be executed at a specific time or interval. */
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+ let subscription = asyncScheduler.schedule(() => {
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+ scheduleObservable.subscribe((element) => {
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+ console.log(element)
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+ })
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+ }, delayTime);
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+}
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+
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+function queue_Scheduler() {
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+ /* In this example, we use the observeOn operator to apply the queueScheduler to the observable stream.
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+ We then subscribe to the stream and execute three tasks (task1, task2, and task3) in order using the queueScheduler.
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+
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+ The queueScheduler ensures that the tasks are executed in the order they were added to the queue, waiting for each task to
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+ complete before executing the next one. This is useful for tasks that need to run in order and should not be interrupted by other tasks.
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+
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+ Note that the queueScheduler is a synchronous scheduler, which means that tasks scheduled using this scheduler will be executed
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+ synchronously. If you need to schedule tasks asynchronously, you can use the asyncScheduler or other schedulers that provide asynchronous execution.*/
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+ let task1 = () => console.log('Task 1');
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+ let task2 = () => console.log('Task 2');
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+ let task3 = () => console.log('Task 3');
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+
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+ of(null)
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+ .pipe(
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+ observeOn(queueScheduler)
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+ )
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+ .subscribe(() => {
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+ task1();
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+ task2();
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+ task3();
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+ });
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}
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-understandingOBS()
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