💡 You can create Redux-like state management with scan!
The key distinction of the scan operator when compared to other reduction operators is its continuous accumulation feature. With each emitted value, the accumulator function is applied, and the accumulated result is emitted instantaneously. You can remember this by the phrase "accumulate and emit on-the-go."
The scan operator is highly useful in scenarios that require real-time monitoring and processing, such as tallying scores in a game, where you want to display the updated score each time points are added. However, be cautious when using scan for cases where the only the final accumulated result is crucial. In those situations, the reduce
operator may be more appropriate, as it emits only the final value after the source completes.
In summary, the scan operator provides a powerful and flexible means of handling continuous accumulation and emission of values, which can be especially useful in real-time monitoring and processing tasks.
( StackBlitz )
// RxJS v6+
import { of } from 'rxjs';
import { scan } from 'rxjs/operators';
const source = of(1, 2, 3);
// basic scan example, sum over time starting with zero
const example = source.pipe(scan((acc, curr) => acc + curr, 0));
// log accumulated values
// output: 1,3,6
const subscribe = example.subscribe(val => console.log(val));
( StackBlitz | jsBin | jsFiddle )
// RxJS v6+
import { Subject } from 'rxjs';
import { scan } from 'rxjs/operators';
const subject = new Subject();
//scan example building an object over time
const example = subject.pipe(
scan((acc, curr) => Object.assign({}, acc, curr), {})
);
//log accumulated values
const subscribe = example.subscribe(val =>
console.log('Accumulated object:', val)
);
//next values into subject, adding properties to object
// {name: 'Joe'}
subject.next({ name: 'Joe' });
// {name: 'Joe', age: 30}
subject.next({ age: 30 });
// {name: 'Joe', age: 30, favoriteLanguage: 'JavaScript'}
subject.next({ favoriteLanguage: 'JavaScript' });
( StackBlitz )
// RxJS v6+
import { interval } from 'rxjs';
import { scan, map, distinctUntilChanged } from 'rxjs/operators';
// Accumulate values in an array, emit random values from this array.
const scanObs = interval(1000)
.pipe(
scan((a, c) => [...a, c], []),
map(r => r[Math.floor(Math.random() * r.length)]),
distinctUntilChanged()
)
.subscribe(console.log);
( StackBlitz )
// RxJS v6+
import { interval, of } from 'rxjs';
import { scan, delay, repeat, mergeMap } from 'rxjs/operators';
const fakeRequest = of('response').pipe(delay(2000));
// output:
// ['response'],
// ['response','response'],
// ['response','response','response'],
// etc...
interval(1000)
.pipe(
mergeMap(_ => fakeRequest),
scan < string > ((all, current) => [...all, current], [])
)
.subscribe(console.log);
- Alphabet Invasion Game
- Battleship Game
- Breakout Game
- Car Racing Game
- Catch The Dot Game
- Click Ninja Game
- Flappy Bird Game
- Matrix Digital Rain
- Memory Game
- Platform Jumper Game
- Progress Bar
- Smart Counter
- Space Invaders Game
- Stop Watch
- Tank Battle Game
- Tetris Game
- Uncover Image Game
- scan 📰 - Official docs
- Aggregating streams with reduce and scan using RxJS 🎥 - Ben Lesh
- Updating data with scan 🎥 💵 - John Linquist
- Transformation operator: scan 🎥 💵 - André Staltz
- Build your own scan operator 🎥 - Kwinten Pisman
📁 Source Code: https://github.com/ReactiveX/rxjs/blob/master/src/internal/operators/scan.ts