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    Functional Reactive Programming

    Posted By: ksveta6
    Functional Reactive Programming

    Functional Reactive Programming by Blackheath, Jones
    2016 | ISBN: 1633430103 | English | 360 pages | PDF | 10 MB

    Summary

    Functional Reactive Programming teaches the concepts and applications of FRP. It offers a careful walk-through of core FRP operations and introduces the concepts and techniques you'll need to use FRP in any language.

    Purchase of the print book includes a free eBook in PDF, Kindle, and ePub formats from Manning Publications.

    About the Technology

    Today's software is shifting to more asynchronous, event-based solutions. For decades, the Observer pattern has been the go-to event infrastructure, but it is known to be bug-prone. Functional reactive programming (FRP) replaces Observer, radically improving the quality of event-based code.

    About the Book

    Functional Reactive Programming teaches you how FRP works and how to use it. You'll begin by gaining an understanding of what FRP is and why it's so powerful. Then, you'll work through greenfield and legacy code as you learn to apply FRP to practical use cases. You'll find examples in this book from many application domains using both Java and JavaScript. When you're finished, you'll be able to use the FRP approach in the systems you build and spend less time fixing problems.

    What's Inside

    Think differently about data and events
    FRP techniques for Java and JavaScript
    Eliminate Observer one listener at a time
    Explore Sodium, RxJS, and Kefir.js FRP systems
    About the Reader

    Readers need intermediate Java or JavaScript skills. No experience with functional programming or FRP required.

    About the Authors

    Stephen Blackheath and Anthony Jones are experienced software developers and the creators of the Sodium FRP library for multiple languages. Foreword by Heinrich Apfelmus. Illustrated by Duncan Hill.

    Table of Contents

    Stop listening!
    Core FRP
    Some everyday widget stuff
    Writing a real application
    New concepts
    FRP on the web
    Switch
    Operational primitives
    Continuous time
    Battle of the paradigms
    Programming in the real world
    Helpers and patterns
    Refactoring
    Adding FRP to existing projects
    Future directions