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What is ReactiveUI?
ReactiveUI is a composable, cross-platform model-view-viewmodel framework for all .NET platforms that is inspired by functional reactive programming which is a paradigm that allows you to abstract mutable state away from your user interfaces and express the idea around a feature in one readable place and improve the testability of your application.
🔨 Get Started 🛍 Install Packages 🎞 Watch Videos 🎓 View Samples 🎤 Discuss ReactiveUI
Introduction to Reactive Programming
Long ago, when computer programming first came to be, machines had to be programmed quite manually. If the technician entered the correct sequence of machine codes in the correct order, then the resulting program behavior would satisfy the business requirements. Instead of telling a computer how to do its job, which error-prone and relies too heavily on the infallibility of the programmer, why don't we just tell it what it's job is and let it figure the rest out?
ReactiveUI is inspired by the paradigm of Functional Reactive Programming, which allows you to model user input as a function that changes over time. This is super cool because it allows you to abstract mutable state away from your user interfaces and express the idea around a feature in one readable place whilst improving application testability. Reactive programming can look scary and complex at first glance, but the best way to describe reactive programming is to think of a spreadsheet:
- Three cells, A, B, and C.
- C is defined as the sum of A and B.
- Whenever A or B changes, C reacts to update itself.
That's reactive programming: changes propagate throughout a system automatically. Welcome to the peanut butter and jelly of programming paradigms. For further information please watch the this video from the Xamarin Evolve conference - Why You Should Be Building Better Mobile Apps with Reactive Programming by Michael Stonis.
Packages Installation
Install the following packages to start building your own ReactiveUI app. Note: some of the platform-specific packages are required. This means your app won't perform as expected until you install the packages properly. See the Installation docs page for more info.
Target Platform | Required ReactiveUI Packages | Events Packages |
---|---|---|
Class library | ReactiveUI |
None |
Unit testing library | ReactiveUI.Testing |
None |
Universal Windows Platform | ReactiveUI |
ReactiveUI.Events |
Windows Presentation Foundation | ReactiveUI.WPF |
ReactiveUI.Events.WPF |
Windows Forms | ReactiveUI.WinForms |
ReactiveUI.Events.WinForms |
Xamarin.Forms library | ReactiveUI.XamForms |
ReactiveUI.Events.XamForms |
Xamarin.Android | ReactiveUI.AndroidSupport |
ReactiveUI.Events |
Xamarin.Mac | ReactiveUI |
ReactiveUI.Events |
Xamarin.iOS | ReactiveUI |
ReactiveUI.Events |
AvaloniaUI | Avalonia.ReactiveUI |
None |
A Compelling Example
Let’s say you have a text field, and whenever the user types something into it, you want to make a network request which searches for that query.
public interface ISearchViewModel
{
string SearchQuery { get; set; }
ReactiveCommand<string, IEnumerable<SearchResult>> Search { get; }
IEnumerable<SearchResult> SearchResults { get; }
}
Define under what conditions a network request will be made
We're describing here, in a declarative way, the conditions in which the Search command is enabled. Now our Command IsEnabled is perfectly efficient, because we're only updating the UI in the scenario when it should change.
var canSearch = this.WhenAnyValue(x => x.SearchQuery, query => !string.IsNullOrWhiteSpace(query));
Make the network connection
ReactiveCommand has built-in support for background operations and guarantees that this block will only run exactly once at a time, and that the CanExecute will auto-disable and that property IsExecuting will be set accordingly whilst it is running.
Search = ReactiveCommand.CreateFromTask(_ => searchService.Search(this.SearchQuery), canSearch);
Update the user interface
ReactiveCommands are themselves IObservables
, whose values are the results from the async method, guaranteed to arrive on the UI thread. We're going to take the list of search results that the background operation loaded, and turn them into our SearchResults property declared as ObservableAsPropertyHelper<T>
.
_searchResults = Search.ToProperty(this, x => x.SearchResults);
Handling failures
Any exception thrown from the ReactiveCommand.CreateFromTask
gets piped to the ThrownExceptions
Observable. Subscribing to this allows you to handle errors on the UI thread.
Search.ThrownExceptions.Subscribe(error => { /* Handle exceptions. */ });
Throttling network requests and automatic search execution behaviour
Whenever the Search query changes, we're going to wait for one second of "dead airtime", then automatically invoke the subscribe command.
this.WhenAnyValue(x => x.SearchQuery)
.Throttle(TimeSpan.FromSeconds(1), RxApp.MainThreadScheduler)
.InvokeCommand(Search);
Binding our ViewModel to the platform-specific UI
ReactiveUI fully supports XAML markup bindings, but we have more to offer. ReactiveUI Bindings work on all platforms, including Xamarin Native and Windows Forms, and operate the same. Those bindings are strongly typed, and renaming a ViewModel property, or a control in the UI layout without updating the binding, the build will fail.
this.WhenActivated(cleanup =>
{
this.Bind(ViewModel, x => x.SearchQuery, x => x.TextBox)
.DisposeWith(cleanup);
this.OneWayBind(ViewModel, x => x.SearchResults, x => x.ListView)
.DisposeWith(cleanup);
this.BindCommand(ViewModel, x => x.Search, x => x.Button)
.DisposeWith(cleanup);
});
Forget about INotifyPropertyChanged boilerplate code
ReactiveUI.Fody package allows you to decorate read-write properties with Reactive
attribute — and code responsible for property change notifications will get injected into your property setters automatically at compile time. We use Fody tooling to make this magic work.
public class ManagedViewModel : ReactiveObject
{
// This reactive property will notify the UI when it changes.
[Reactive] public string SearchQuery { get; set; }
}
The code above gets compiled into the following code:
public class CompiledViewModel : ReactiveObject
{
private string searchQuery;
public string SearchQuery
{
get => searchQuery;
set => this.RaiseAndSetIfChanged(ref searchQuery, value);
}
}
Support
If you have a question, please see if any discussions in our GitHub issues or Stack Overflow have already answered it.
If you want to discuss something or just need help, here is our Slack room where there are always individuals looking to help out!
If you are twitter savvy you can tweet #reactiveui with your question and someone should be able to reach out and help also.
If you have discovered a 🐜 or have a feature suggestion, feel free to create an issue on GitHub.
Contribute
ReactiveUI is developed under an OSI-approved open source license, making it freely usable and distributable, even for commercial use. Because of our Open Collective model for funding and transparency, we are able to funnel support and funds through to our contributors and community. We ❤ the people who are involved in this project, and we’d love to have you on board, especially if you are just getting started or have never contributed to open-source before.
So here's to you, lovely person who wants to join us — this is how you can support us:
- Responding to questions on StackOverflow
- Passing on knowledge and teaching the next generation of developers
- Donations and Corporate Sponsorships
- Submitting documentation updates where you see fit or lacking
- Making contributions to the code base
- Asking your employer to reciprocate and contribute to open-source
We're also looking for people to assist with code reviews of ReactiveUI contributions. If you're experienced with any of the below technologies, you can join the team and receive notifications:
- Android reviewers
- Apple TV reviewers
- Dot Net Core
- Fody reviewers
- iOS reviewers
- Learning Team reviewers
- Mac reviewers
- ReactiveUI Core reviewers
- Tizen
- UWP reviewers
- Web Assembly
- WinForms reviewers
- WPF reviewers
- Xamarin Forms reviewers
.NET Foundation
ReactiveUI is part of the .NET Foundation. Other projects that are associated with the foundation include the Microsoft .NET Compiler Platform ("Roslyn") as well as the Microsoft ASP.NET family of projects, Microsoft .NET Core & Xamarin Forms.
Core Team
Geoffrey Huntley Sydney, Australia |
Kent Boogaart Adelaide, Australia |
Olly Levett London, United Kingdom |
Paul Betts San Francisco, USA |
Brendan Forster Melbourne, Australia |
Oren Novotny New York, USA |
Glenn Watson Washington, USA |
Core Team
Learning Team
Android Team
Apple TV Team
Dot Net Core Team
Fody Team
iOS Team
Mac Team
Tizen Team
UWP Team
Web Assembly Team
WinForms Team
WPF Team
Xamarin Forms Team
Alumni
Sponsorship
The core team members, ReactiveUI contributors and contributors in the ecosystem do this open source work in their free time. If you use ReactiveUI a serious task, and you'd like us to invest more time on it, please donate. This project increases your income/productivity too. It makes development and applications faster and it reduces the required bandwidth.
This is how we use the donations:
- Allow the core team to work on ReactiveUI
- Thank contributors if they invested a large amount of time in contributing
- Support projects in the ecosystem that are of great value for users
- Support projects that are voted most (work in progress)
- Infrastructure cost
- Fees for money handling
Backers
Become a backer and get your image on our README on Github with a link to your site.
Sponsors
Become a sponsor and get your logo on our README on Github with a link to your site.