It might be know to you already, that there are situations where you actually want to unsubscribe from your Observables
.
There are several ways to do this. In several projects, I stumbled across a mixture of using takeWhile
& takeUntil
. This raises the question, why are there two of that, which sounds similar and act similarly?
About takeWhile
Well, let's take a look at a quick example. The first code snippet we are looking at is using takeWhile
to unsubscribe from an Observable
.
In this example I have two different Observables
. The first is created using the interval operator. This will emit notifications till the condition passed to takeWhile
is falsy. Inside the takeWhile
we use a boolean variable describing if the user has already clicked or not. As soon has one clicks somewhere in the screen, we unsubscribe from our interval
-Observable. To determine if the user already clicked we used a second Observable
created with the fromEvent operator. Additionally we used the tap operator, to log the notifications in the console. We can see that our Observable is unsubscribed as soon as there is no new log coming in.
About takeUntil
From a high-level perspective, the code snippets don't look that different. Instead of having a boolean property, describing the state of our Observable
, we now directly used the click
-Observable.
We pass this Observable
instance to the takeUntil
operator and as soon as the user clicks somewhere, our interval
-Observable will be unsubscribed from.
The Problem
So all in all both code snippets look similar and behave similar, right? Well, No!
Let's have a look at the marble diagrams describing those operators because this will highlight the difference between those two operators.
takeUntil marble diagram, kindly provided by Michael Hladky
takeWhile marble diagram, kindly provided by Michael Hladky
The problem here is that takeWhile
is intended to take an incoming notification and check a specified condition on it, which might lead to an unsubscribe. The important fact is, that takeWhile
is triggered by the incoming notification and might unsubscribe afterwards. In contrast takeUntil
is triggered by the passed Observable
.
That's why takeWhile
might cause several issues. So definitely, it needs a new notification to unsubscribe. Imagine having a long-living Observable
. You will need one notification more with takeWhile
than with takeUntil
. Also, this additional notification can initiate multiple processes within your Observable
. Imagine having code like this:
longLivingObservable$
.pipe(
tap(() => this.startAnimation()),
switchMap(val => this.makeHttpCall(val)),
takeWhile(val => this.alive),
)
.subscribe();
So what's the issue with this piece of code? Well, our component is already destroyed and due to the needed notification, needed before unsubscribing kicks in, we will start an animation and trigger an HTTP call. This is probably unwanted and just afterwards we will check if we want to unsubscribe from our Observable
. Besides the fact that those operations are totally superfluous, it also might break our app or pollute our state.
Additionally, if our Observable
doesn't emit an additional value, the takeWhile
will never be triggered and therefore our Observable
will never be unsubscribed. This can be considered as memory-leak, because our Observable
stays subscribed.
Now maybe one might argue: "Well, I could move the takeWhile
operator at the very beginning of the observable pipeline!"
That's true, you could do this, and you will save the unneeded operations, which is a good start, but you won't unsubscribe from inner observables. So if the Observable
returned by makeHttpCall
is a long-living Observable
, it will not unsubscribe from that, if the takeWhile
is before switchMap
in the pipe. By the way, the same goes for takeUntil
, so make sure to have the unsubscribe-operator at the very end of your pipe.
The Solution
Don't get me wrong, takeWhile
is an amazing operator, but just if you actually use the incoming value to determine, whether you want to unsubscribe or not! Do not depend on "global" state, when using takeWhile
.
For those scenarios stick to takeUntil
and use a Subject instance to trigger it.
A real-world use case for takeWhile
would be a long-polling mechanism. Imagine fetching a resource describing a process. This process can be successfully completed or otherwise ongoing. For sure you just want to continue polling while the process isn't completed yet. The code for such a scenario could look like this.
longPolling$.pipe(takeWhile(process => process.completed)).subscribe(() => handleNotCompleted());
For such a scenario, where we use the incoming will, to determine wether we want to stay subscribed or not, takeWhile
is ideal! If we have an external trigger, stick with takeUntil
.
Wrap Up
- use takeWhile when the incoming value make you want to unsubscribe
- use takeUntil when there is an outer event determine that you want to unsubscribe
- use both of them as the last operator in your
Observable
pipeline
Special Thanks
I'm really thankful for all the amazing people helped me writing this blog posts.
This goes out to:
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