RxJs 6 is out and with it new exciting additions and changes! Ben Lesh highlights that RxJS 6 brings cleaner imports while having a smaller API, a backward compatibility package to update without changing your code, and automatic code migration for TypeScript.

These changes provide developers with improvements in modularity, a boost in performance and easier to debug call stacks. The RxJS team has made a solid effort on making this release as backward compatible as possible. However, in an effort to reduce the API surface of the RxJS library, some breaking changes were introduced.

Let's explore what the RxJS team has included and changed in this new release.

RxJS 6 Backward Compatibility

To make the migration path from RxJS 5 to RxJS 6, the RxJS team has released a sibling package called rxjs-compat . This package creates a compatibility layer between the APIs of v6 and v5 .

The team recommends that most developer upgrade existing applications by installing both rxjs and rxjs-compat at ^6.0.0 :

npm install rxjs@6 rxjs-compat@6 --save

This package allows you to continue running your existing codebase without issues while you implement the RxJS 6 upgrades. It supports functionality that is removed with the release of RxJS 6.

The bundle size of your application will increase with the installation of rxjs-compat ; this effect is amplified if your project also integrates with Webpack < 4.0.0 . Therefore, it is recommended that rxjs-compat is removed from your project once the upgrade process has been completed.

Upgrading to RxJS 6 may introduce type errors in your codebase that were not previously shown.

Limitations of Upgrading to RxJS with rxjs-compat

There are only two breaking changes that are not covered by the rxjs-compat package:

TypeScript prototype operators

In the rare instance that your codebase defines its own TypeScript prototype operators and modifies the Observable namespace, your operator code would need to be updated in order for TypeScript to compile.

From the release notes examples, a user-defined prototype operator can be created as follows:

Observable.prototype.userDefined = () => { return new Observable((subscriber) => { this.subscribe({ next(value) { subscriber.next(value); }, error(err) { subscriber.error(err); }, complete() { subscriber.complete(); }, }); }); }); source$.userDefined().subscribe();

To compile the previously custom operator, the following changes would need to be made:

const userDefined = <T>() => (source: Observable<T>) => new Observable<T>((subscriber) => { this.subscribe({ next(value) { subscriber.next(value); }, error(err) { subscriber.error(err); }, complete() { subscriber.complete(); }, }); }); }); source$.pipe( userDefined(), )

Synchronous error handling

Calling Observable.subscribe() within a try/catch block is no longer supported. Instead, replace the try/catch block with asynchronous error handling done with the error callback in the Observable.subscribe() method.

As shown in the release notes:

// deprecated try { source$.subscribe(nextFn, undefined, completeFn); } catch (err) { handleError(err); } // use instead source$.subscribe(nextFn, handleError, completeFn);

Observable.subscribe() now must define an error callback to handle errors asynchronously.

Changes to Make Before Dropping the RxJS Compatibility Layer

As mentioned earlier, rxjs-compat provides a temporary compatibility layer between the APIs of v5 and v6 . Essentially, rxjs-compat provisions your codebase with functionality from v5 that it relies on, allowing you to gradually upgrade your codebase to v6 . To complete the upgrade process and remove the rxjs-compat dependency from your project, your codebase would need to be refactored to stop relying on that v5 functionality which includes:

Changes to import paths

The recommendation for TypeScript developers is to use rxjs-tslint to refactor import paths.

The following rules have been designed by the RxJS team to help JavaScript developers refactor import paths:

rxjs : Contains creation methods, types, schedulers, and utilities.

import { Observable, Subject, asapScheduler, pipe, of, from, interval, merge, fromEvent } from "rxjs";

rxjs/operators : Contains all pipeable operators.

import { map, filter, scan } from "rxjs/operators";

rxjs/webSocket : Contains the web socket subject implementation.

import { webSocket } from "rxjs/webSocket";

rxjs/ajax : Contains the Rx ajax implementation.

import { ajax } from "rxjs/ajax";

rxjs/testing : Contains the testing utilities for RxJS.

import { TestScheduler } from "rxjs/testing";

Have you tried updating your app using rxjs-tslint? — Ben Lesh 🛋️👑🔥 (@BenLesh) April 25, 2018

Use Piping Instead of Chaining

Use piping instead of chaining as new operator syntax. The result of one operator is piped into another operator.

Don't remove rxjs-compat until you have refactored all chained operators into piped operators. If you are a TypeScript user, ts-lint can automate this refactoring to some extent for well-typed code.

During ng-conf 2018, Ben Lesh explained why we should use pipeable operators:

Follow these steps to reactor your operator chains into pipes:

Install all operators used from rxjs/operators .

Note Some operators have a name change due to name collisions with JavaScript reserved words! These include: do -> tap , catch -> catchError , switch -> switchAll , finally -> finalize .

import { map, filter, catchError, mergeMap } from "rxjs/operators";

Attach a pipe() method to the source and wrap all the operators within it. Ensure that the . is removed from each operator name and that they are comma-delimited. Remember that some operators need to change their names.

The following is an example of a pipeable refactoring from the release notes:

// an operator chain source .map(x => x + x) .mergeMap(n => of(n + 1, n + 2) .filter(x => x % 1 == 0) .scan((acc, x) => acc + x, 0) ) .catch(err => of("error found")) .subscribe(printResult); // must be updated to a pipe flow source .pipe( map(x => x + x), mergeMap(n => of(n + 1, n + 2).pipe( filter(x => x % 1 == 0), scan((acc, x) => acc + x, 0) ) ), catchError(err => of("error found")) ) .subscribe(printResult);

Notice how we use pipe() twice in the above code as internal sources are also piped.

Use Functions instead of Classes

Functions have replaced classes that operate on observables. All observable classes have been removed. Their functionality is replaced by existing operators, new operators, or functions. Each of their replacement has the same functionality that each class had.

For example:

// removed ArrayObservable.create(myArray) // use instead from(myArray) // you may also use new operator fromArray().

For a complete list of the v6 creation functions that replace v5 classes, please visit the RxJS documentation.

Special case:

ConnectableObservable is hidden from direct use in v6 . To access it, use the operators multicast , publish , publishReplay , publishLast .

is hidden from direct use in . To access it, use the operators , , , . SubscribeOnObservable is hidden from direct use in v6 . To access it, use the operator subscribeOn .

Removing resultSelector

Result selectors are a RxJS feature that is not widely used and in some cases wasn't even documented. However, result selectors did bloat the codebase significantly; thus, the RxJS team decided to deprecate or remove them.

For developers making use of result selectors, they would need to replace the resultSelector parameter with external result-selection code.

For two functions, first() and last() these parameters have been removed and must be updated before removing rxjs-compat .

For other functions that have resultSelector as a parameter, such as mapping operators, this parameter has been deprecated and their implementation has been re-written in a much more compact form. If you remove rxjs-compat , these function will continue to work; however, the RxJS team states that they must be removed before the v7 release.

For more details on this rare implementation, please visit the RxJS documentation.

Other RxJS 6 Deprecations

Observable.if and Observable.throw .

Observable.if has been replaced by iif() and Observable.throw is now throwError() . You can use rxjs-tslint to convert these deprecated Observable method calls into function calls.

The release notes gives us the following example:

Observable.if > iif()

// deprecated Observable.if(test, a$, b$); // use instead iif(test, a$, b$);

Observable.error > throwError()

// deprecated Observable.throw(new Error()); //use instead throwError(new Error());

Deprecated Methods

According to the migration guide, other methods have been deprecated and refactored:

merge

import { merge } from "rxjs/operators"; a$.pipe(merge(b$, c$)); // becomes import { merge } from "rxjs"; merge(a$, b$, c$);

concat

import { concat } from "rxjs/operators"; a$.pipe(concat(b$, c$)); // becomes import { concat } from "rxjs"; concat(a$, b$, c$);

combineLatest

import { combineLatest } from "rxjs/operators"; a$.pipe(combineLatest(b$, c$)); // becomes import { combineLatest } from "rxjs"; combineLatest(a$, b$, c$);

race

import { race } from "rxjs/operators"; a$.pipe(race(b$, c$)); // becomes import { race } from "rxjs"; race(a$, b$, c$);

zip

import { zip } from "rxjs/operators"; a$.pipe(zip(b$, c$)); // becomes import { zip } from "rxjs"; zip(a$, b$, c$);

Recap

RxJS 6 brings some breaking changes but they are mitigated by the addition of the rxjs-compat package that allows you to gradually migrate while keeping your v5 code operational. For TypeScript users, which cover the majority of Angular developers, tslint offers a great deal of automated refactoring to make the transition even easier.

As always, any upgrades and code changes may invite bugs into the codebase or even make elusive ones resurface. Solid testing practices should always be in place to ensure that your users keep receiving the same quality experience that you were providing them when v5 was part of your codebase.

Watch the complete introduction to RxJS 6 by Ben Lesh:

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