Pure holder of a single value of type A
that can be read in the effect F
.
Attributes
- Companion
- object
- Source
- Signal.scala
- Graph
-
- Supertypes
-
class Objecttrait Matchableclass Any
- Known subtypes
-
- Self type
-
Members list
Value members
Abstract methods
Returns a stream of the current value of the signal.
Returns a stream of the current value of the signal. An element is always available -- on each pull, the current value is supplied.
Attributes
- Source
- Signal.scala
Returns a stream of the current value and subsequent updates to this signal.
Returns a stream of the current value and subsequent updates to this signal.
Even if you are pulling as fast as possible, updates that are very close together may result in only the last update appearing in the stream. In general, when you pull from this stream you may be notified of only the latest update since your last pull. If you want to be notified about every single update, use a Queue
or Channel
instead.
Attributes
- Source
- Signal.scala
Gets the current value of this Signal
.
Concrete methods
Returns a signal derived from this one, that drops update events that did not change the value.
Returns a signal derived from this one, that drops update events that did not change the value.
Attributes
- Source
- Signal.scala
Returns the current value of this Signal
and a Stream
to subscribe to subsequent updates, with the same semantics as discrete.
Returns the current value of this Signal
and a Stream
to subscribe to subsequent updates, with the same semantics as discrete. The updates stream should be compiled at most once.
Attributes
- Source
- Signal.scala
Interrupts the supplied Stream
when this Signal
is true
.
Converts this signal to signal of B
by applying f
.
Predicates the supplied effect f
on this Signal
being true
.
Returns when the condition becomes true, semantically blocking in the meantime.
Returns when the condition becomes true, semantically blocking in the meantime.
This method is particularly useful to transform naive, recursive polling algorithms on the content of a Signal
/ SignallingRef
into semantically blocking ones. For example, here's how to encode a very simple cache with expiry, pay attention to the definition of view
:
trait Refresh[F[_], A] {
def get: F[A]
}
object Refresh {
def create[F[_]: Temporal, A](
action: F[A],
refreshAfter: A => FiniteDuration,
defaultExpiry: FiniteDuration
): Resource[F, Refresh[F, A]] =
Resource
.eval(SignallingRef[F, Option[Either[Throwable, A]]](None))
.flatMap { state =>
def refresh: F[Unit] =
state.set(None) >> action.attempt.flatMap { res =>
val t = res.map(refreshAfter).getOrElse(defaultExpiry)
state.set(res.some) >> Temporal[F].sleep(t) >> refresh
}
def view = new Refresh[F, A] {
def get: F[A] = state.get.flatMap {
case Some(res) => Temporal[F].fromEither(res)
case None => state.waitUntil(_.isDefined) >> get
}
}
refresh.background.as(view)
}
}
Note that because Signal
prioritizes the latest update when its state is updating very quickly, completion of the F[Unit]
might not trigger if the condition becomes true and then false immediately after.
Therefore, natural use cases of waitUntil
tend to fall into two categories: - Scenarios where conditions don't change instantly, such as periodic timed processes updating the Signal
/SignallingRef
. - Scenarios where conditions might change instantly, but the p
predicate is monotonic, i.e. if it tests true for an event, it will test true for the following events as well. Examples include waiting for a unique ID stored in a Signal
to change, or waiting for the value of the Signal
of an ordered Stream[IO, Int]
to be greater than a certain number.
Attributes
- Source
- Signal.scala
Concrete fields
Attributes
- Source
- Signal.scala
Attributes
- Source
- Signal.scala