91 lines
3.1 KiB
TypeScript
91 lines
3.1 KiB
TypeScript
import { Observable } from '../Observable';
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import { SubscribableOrPromise } from '../types';
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/**
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* Decides at subscription time which Observable will actually be subscribed.
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*
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* <span class="informal">`If` statement for Observables.</span>
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*
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* `iif` accepts a condition function and two Observables. When
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* an Observable returned by the operator is subscribed, condition function will be called.
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* Based on what boolean it returns at that moment, consumer will subscribe either to
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* the first Observable (if condition was true) or to the second (if condition was false). Condition
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* function may also not return anything - in that case condition will be evaluated as false and
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* second Observable will be subscribed.
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*
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* Note that Observables for both cases (true and false) are optional. If condition points to an Observable that
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* was left undefined, resulting stream will simply complete immediately. That allows you to, rather
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* than controlling which Observable will be subscribed, decide at runtime if consumer should have access
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* to given Observable or not.
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*
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* If you have more complex logic that requires decision between more than two Observables, {@link defer}
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* will probably be a better choice. Actually `iif` can be easily implemented with {@link defer}
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* and exists only for convenience and readability reasons.
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*
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*
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* ## Examples
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* ### Change at runtime which Observable will be subscribed
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* ```ts
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* import { iif, of } from 'rxjs';
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*
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* let subscribeToFirst;
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* const firstOrSecond = iif(
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* () => subscribeToFirst,
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* of('first'),
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* of('second'),
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* );
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*
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* subscribeToFirst = true;
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* firstOrSecond.subscribe(value => console.log(value));
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*
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* // Logs:
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* // "first"
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*
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* subscribeToFirst = false;
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* firstOrSecond.subscribe(value => console.log(value));
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*
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* // Logs:
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* // "second"
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*
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* ```
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*
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* ### Control an access to an Observable
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* ```ts
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* let accessGranted;
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* const observableIfYouHaveAccess = iif(
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* () => accessGranted,
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* of('It seems you have an access...'), // Note that only one Observable is passed to the operator.
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* );
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*
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* accessGranted = true;
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* observableIfYouHaveAccess.subscribe(
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* value => console.log(value),
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* err => {},
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* () => console.log('The end'),
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* );
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*
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* // Logs:
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* // "It seems you have an access..."
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* // "The end"
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*
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* accessGranted = false;
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* observableIfYouHaveAccess.subscribe(
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* value => console.log(value),
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* err => {},
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* () => console.log('The end'),
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* );
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*
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* // Logs:
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* // "The end"
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* ```
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*
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* @see {@link defer}
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*
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* @param {function(): boolean} condition Condition which Observable should be chosen.
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* @param {Observable} [trueObservable] An Observable that will be subscribed if condition is true.
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* @param {Observable} [falseObservable] An Observable that will be subscribed if condition is false.
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* @return {Observable} Either first or second Observable, depending on condition.
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* @static true
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* @name iif
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* @owner Observable
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*/
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export declare function iif<T = never, F = never>(condition: () => boolean, trueResult?: SubscribableOrPromise<T>, falseResult?: SubscribableOrPromise<F>): Observable<T | F>;
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