- RxCombine VS rxswift-to-combine-cheatsheet
- RxCombine VS CombineCocoa
- RxCombine VS OpenCombine
- RxCombine VS RxWebSocket
- RxCombine VS AOperation
- RxCombine VS SwiftCoroutine
- RxCombine VS CombineCoreBluetooth
- RxCombine VS FileSystemEventPublisher
- RxCombine VS CombineRxSwiftPerformance
- RxCombine VS CombineCloudKit
RxCombine Alternatives
Similar projects and alternatives to RxCombine
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rxswift-to-combine-cheatsheet
RxSwift to Apple’s Combine Cheat Sheet
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WorkOS
The modern identity platform for B2B SaaS. The APIs are flexible and easy-to-use, supporting authentication, user identity, and complex enterprise features like SSO and SCIM provisioning.
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OpenCombine
Open source implementation of Apple's Combine framework for processing values over time.
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AOperation
A Wrapper on NSOperation, which Makes using of NSOperation More Efficient
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CombineCoreBluetooth
A wrapper API for CoreBluetooth using Combine Publishers
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InfluxDB
Power Real-Time Data Analytics at Scale. Get real-time insights from all types of time series data with InfluxDB. Ingest, query, and analyze billions of data points in real-time with unbounded cardinality.
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FileSystemEventPublisher
A publisher that emits events in the file system.
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CombineRxSwiftPerformance
A test suite comparing the performance of Combine and RxSwift
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CombineCloudKit
Discontinued 🌤 Swift Combine extensions for reactive CloudKit record processing
RxCombine reviews and mentions
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I recently started looking more into the Combine framework. I found these Interactive Marble diagrams of Rx Observables and wanted to share them. Unfortunately, the operators are not always the same for Combine but it is still good fun. Not sure how difficult it would be to replicate this.
The sad thing to notice is how many of the operators in RxSwift have no Combine equivalent. Fortunately, there is the RxCombine library so you can freely mix the two.
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Combine from RxSwift - Highlights for smooth adaption
Since Combine only supports iOS 13 onwards, it may be a bit early for most of current projects to adopt. Nevertheless, it’s never too soon to learn new tech and start experimenting with it to get yourself comfortable and “relevant”. The framework itself is still under development and improvement, so don’t forget to check back in future WWDCs for any cool new updates. I hope this article inspires you to dive deeper and learn more about Combine. I would like to give my thanks to Donny Wals for his book Practical Combine, as well as all the resources listed in the References section for making this article possible. In the meantime, you can also check out RxCombine to discover the possiblities of bridging between the two frameworks. Have fun!
Stats
CombineCommunity/RxCombine is an open source project licensed under MIT License which is an OSI approved license.
The primary programming language of RxCombine is Swift.