I\'ve seen patterns like this:
Observable nameChanges = nameDataSource.changes().share();
// One subscriber
autoUnsubscribe(nameChanges.subscribe(
I would not have to think about when I need to share an Observable, and when I don't.
I'm afraid that you will have to think when programming. ;)
In the above code, yes, sharing makes sense. But what if you we're updating something on the backend, using the same network and method call from two different points, updating with different data? You would have the same call with the same Observable, but you certainly wouldn't want to share the Observable instance (and the network call) because that means that all successive calls with data would be discarded in the favour of the first one. Or if you wanted to start a timer whenever you're subscribed, you again wouldn't want to share this with other Observables.
Also, it is much easier to add certain behaviour than to remove it. For example, if sharing was the default, and the second subscriber wouldn't want to share and removes the sharing - what about the third one? Will it share it with the first one or not? At that point the sharing property becomes the property of the Subscriber
and not the Observable
and you would have no clear way of knowing which one is shared and which one isn't.
There are two kinds of Observable
s: cold and hot. Cold Observable
s start producing items when there is an Observer
to them and they do it on an individual basis. Subscribing with multiple Observer
s will result in multiple runs of the same cold Observable
. An example of this is an Observable
that issues a network request.
In contrast, a hot Observable
can produce items with or without the presence of Observer
s. These Observable
s usually multicast the same items to all of their current Observer
s. An example of this is an Observable
of button clicks.
To turn a cold Observable
into a hot one, you can use publish()
which will make sure only a single subscription is established to the source Observable
no matter how many Observer
s there are. Thus, the chain will now act as a hot multicasting Observable
from the Observer
s' perspective.
However, often it is not economic to keep an originally cold Observable
running after all Observer
s of publish()
have gone away, therefore the refCount()
operator can be used to keep track of them and stop the source when there are no interesting parties left.
If your source is already hot, you don't need share()
.
Why is not share() the default behavior for all observables?
Actually, this property is one of the important contributions of the modern reactive programming paradigm: the distinction of the hot and cold Observable
s.
However, multicasting is expensive on itself because you have to keep track of the set of current Observer
s in order to notify them with new events, and this can lead to all sorts of logical race conditions to be defended against. A cold Observable
is known to talk only to a single Observer
so there is no need for the extra tracking overhead.