Execute function on observable cancellation - javascript

I want to have an observable that when unsubscribed it calls a function but only when it is unsubscribed without error and without getting to complete. The observable I am trying to build usually gets raced with another observable. I want when the other observable "wins" this one executes a function.
I tried finalize operator but it executes always.
playback.ts
import { timer } from "rxjs";
import { takeUntil, finalize } from "rxjs/operators";
import errorobs$ from "./errorobs";
export default function() {
return timer(10000).pipe(
takeUntil(errorobs$),
finalize(finalFunc)
);
}
function finalFunc() {
console.log("final function executed");
}
errorobs.ts
import { fromEvent } from "rxjs";
import { map } from "rxjs/operators";
export default fromEvent(document.getElementById("errorBtn"), "click").pipe(
map(() => {
throw new Error("my error");
})
);
I have made a small demo here https://codesandbox.io/s/q7pwowm4l6
click start to start "the observable".
click cancel to make the other observable win
click error to generate an error

One way to achieve this is using a custom operator, like my onCancel() below:
const {Observable} = rxjs
function onCancel(f) {
return observable => new Observable(observer => {
let completed = false
let errored = false
const subscription = observable.subscribe({
next: v => observer.next(v),
error: e => {
errored = true
observer.error(e)
},
complete: () => {
completed = true
observer.complete()
}
})
return () => {
subscription.unsubscribe()
if (!completed && !errored) f()
}
})
}
// Test:
const {interval} = rxjs
const {take} = rxjs.operators
// This one gets cancelled:
const s = interval(200).pipe(
onCancel(() => console.warn('s cancelled!'))
).subscribe(() => {})
setTimeout(() => s.unsubscribe(), 500)
// This one completes before unsubscribe():
const q = interval(200).pipe(
take(2),
onCancel(() => console.warn('q cancelled!'))
).subscribe(() => {})
setTimeout(() => q.unsubscribe(), 500)
<script src="//unpkg.com/rxjs#6/bundles/rxjs.umd.min.js"></script>

It really works as you describe it. finalize is executed when the chain is being disposed which is when all subscribers unsubscribe, when the chain errors or when it completes.
There's already an issue on RxJS Github page for this feature: https://github.com/ReactiveX/rxjs/issues/2823
In the link above you can see an example of a custom operator that adds reason to the finalize operator.
I had to deal with this use-case myself and added this operator to my own collection of RxJS operators: https://github.com/martinsik/rxjs-extra/blob/master/doc/finalizeWithReason.md

Related

custom hook memory leak [duplicate]

When fetching data I'm getting: Can't perform a React state update on an unmounted component. The app still works, but react is suggesting I might be causing a memory leak.
This is a no-op, but it indicates a memory leak in your application. To fix, cancel all subscriptions and asynchronous tasks in a useEffect cleanup function."
Why do I keep getting this warning?
I tried researching these solutions:
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/AbortSignal
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/AbortController
but this still was giving me the warning.
const ArtistProfile = props => {
const [artistData, setArtistData] = useState(null)
const token = props.spotifyAPI.user_token
const fetchData = () => {
const id = window.location.pathname.split("/").pop()
console.log(id)
props.spotifyAPI.getArtistProfile(id, ["album"], "US", 10)
.then(data => {setArtistData(data)})
}
useEffect(() => {
fetchData()
return () => { props.spotifyAPI.cancelRequest() }
}, [])
return (
<ArtistProfileContainer>
<AlbumContainer>
{artistData ? artistData.artistAlbums.items.map(album => {
return (
<AlbumTag
image={album.images[0].url}
name={album.name}
artists={album.artists}
key={album.id}
/>
)
})
: null}
</AlbumContainer>
</ArtistProfileContainer>
)
}
Edit:
In my api file I added an AbortController() and used a signal so I can cancel a request.
export function spotifyAPI() {
const controller = new AbortController()
const signal = controller.signal
// code ...
this.getArtist = (id) => {
return (
fetch(
`https://api.spotify.com/v1/artists/${id}`, {
headers: {"Authorization": "Bearer " + this.user_token}
}, {signal})
.then(response => {
return checkServerStat(response.status, response.json())
})
)
}
// code ...
// this is my cancel method
this.cancelRequest = () => controller.abort()
}
My spotify.getArtistProfile() looks like this
this.getArtistProfile = (id,includeGroups,market,limit,offset) => {
return Promise.all([
this.getArtist(id),
this.getArtistAlbums(id,includeGroups,market,limit,offset),
this.getArtistTopTracks(id,market)
])
.then(response => {
return ({
artist: response[0],
artistAlbums: response[1],
artistTopTracks: response[2]
})
})
}
but because my signal is used for individual api calls that are resolved in a Promise.all I can't abort() that promise so I will always be setting the state.
For me, clean the state in the unmount of the component helped.
const [state, setState] = useState({});
useEffect(() => {
myFunction();
return () => {
setState({}); // This worked for me
};
}, []);
const myFunction = () => {
setState({
name: 'Jhon',
surname: 'Doe',
})
}
Sharing the AbortController between the fetch() requests is the right approach.
When any of the Promises are aborted, Promise.all() will reject with AbortError:
function Component(props) {
const [fetched, setFetched] = React.useState(false);
React.useEffect(() => {
const ac = new AbortController();
Promise.all([
fetch('http://placekitten.com/1000/1000', {signal: ac.signal}),
fetch('http://placekitten.com/2000/2000', {signal: ac.signal})
]).then(() => setFetched(true))
.catch(ex => console.error(ex));
return () => ac.abort(); // Abort both fetches on unmount
}, []);
return fetched;
}
const main = document.querySelector('main');
ReactDOM.render(React.createElement(Component), main);
setTimeout(() => ReactDOM.unmountComponentAtNode(main), 1); // Unmount after 1ms
<script src="//cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/react/16.8.3/umd/react.development.js"></script>
<script src="//cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/react-dom/16.8.3/umd/react-dom.development.js"></script>
<main></main>
For example, you have some component that does some asynchronous actions, then writes the result to state and displays the state content on a page:
export default function MyComponent() {
const [loading, setLoading] = useState(false);
const [someData, setSomeData] = useState({});
// ...
useEffect( () => {
(async () => {
setLoading(true);
someResponse = await doVeryLongRequest(); // it takes some time
// When request is finished:
setSomeData(someResponse.data); // (1) write data to state
setLoading(false); // (2) write some value to state
})();
}, []);
return (
<div className={loading ? "loading" : ""}>
{someData}
<Link to="SOME_LOCAL_LINK">Go away from here!</Link>
</div>
);
}
Let's say that user clicks some link when doVeryLongRequest() still executes. MyComponent is unmounted but the request is still alive and when it gets a response it tries to set state in lines (1) and (2) and tries to change the appropriate nodes in HTML. We'll get an error from subject.
We can fix it by checking whether compponent is still mounted or not. Let's create a componentMounted ref (line (3) below) and set it true. When component is unmounted we'll set it to false (line (4) below). And let's check the componentMounted variable every time we try to set state (line (5) below).
The code with fixes:
export default function MyComponent() {
const [loading, setLoading] = useState(false);
const [someData, setSomeData] = useState({});
const componentMounted = useRef(true); // (3) component is mounted
// ...
useEffect( () => {
(async () => {
setLoading(true);
someResponse = await doVeryLongRequest(); // it takes some time
// When request is finished:
if (componentMounted.current){ // (5) is component still mounted?
setSomeData(someResponse.data); // (1) write data to state
setLoading(false); // (2) write some value to state
}
return () => { // This code runs when component is unmounted
componentMounted.current = false; // (4) set it to false when we leave the page
}
})();
}, []);
return (
<div className={loading ? "loading" : ""}>
{someData}
<Link to="SOME_LOCAL_LINK">Go away from here!</Link>
</div>
);
}
Why do I keep getting this warning?
The intention of this warning is to help you prevent memory leaks in your application. If the component updates it's state after it has been unmounted from the DOM, this is an indication that there could be a memory leak, but it is an indication with a lot of false positives.
How do I know if I have a memory leak?
You have a memory leak if an object that lives longer than your component holds a reference to it, either directly or indirectly. This usually happens when you subscribe to events or changes of some kind without unsubscribing when your component unmounts from the DOM.
It typically looks like this:
useEffect(() => {
function handleChange() {
setState(store.getState())
}
// "store" lives longer than the component,
// and will hold a reference to the handleChange function.
// Preventing the component to be garbage collected after
// unmount.
store.subscribe(handleChange)
// Uncomment the line below to avoid memory leak in your component
// return () => store.unsubscribe(handleChange)
}, [])
Where store is an object that lives further up the React tree (possibly in a context provider), or in global/module scope. Another example is subscribing to events:
useEffect(() => {
function handleScroll() {
setState(window.scrollY)
}
// document is an object in global scope, and will hold a reference
// to the handleScroll function, preventing garbage collection
document.addEventListener('scroll', handleScroll)
// Uncomment the line below to avoid memory leak in your component
// return () => document.removeEventListener(handleScroll)
}, [])
Another example worth remembering is the web API setInterval, which can also cause memory leak if you forget to call clearInterval when unmounting.
But that is not what I am doing, why should I care about this warning?
React's strategy to warn whenever state updates happen after your component has unmounted creates a lot of false positives. The most common I've seen is by setting state after an asynchronous network request:
async function handleSubmit() {
setPending(true)
await post('/someapi') // component might unmount while we're waiting
setPending(false)
}
You could technically argue that this also is a memory leak, since the component isn't released immediately after it is no longer needed. If your "post" takes a long time to complete, then it will take a long time to for the memory to be released. However, this is not something you should worry about, because it will be garbage collected eventually. In these cases, you could simply ignore the warning.
But it is so annoying to see the warning, how do I remove it?
There are a lot of blogs and answers on stackoverflow suggesting to keep track of the mounted state of your component and wrap your state updates in an if-statement:
let isMountedRef = useRef(false)
useEffect(() => {
isMountedRef.current = true
return () => {
isMountedRef.current = false
}
}, [])
async function handleSubmit() {
setPending(true)
await post('/someapi')
if (!isMountedRef.current) {
setPending(false)
}
}
This is not an recommended approach! Not only does it make the code less readable and adds runtime overhead, but it might also might not work well with future features of React. It also does nothing at all about the "memory leak", the component will still live just as long as without that extra code.
The recommended way to deal with this is to either cancel the asynchronous function (with for instance the AbortController API), or to ignore it.
In fact, React dev team recognises the fact that avoiding false positives is too difficult, and has removed the warning in v18 of React.
You can try this set a state like this and check if your component mounted or not. This way you are sure that if your component is unmounted you are not trying to fetch something.
const [didMount, setDidMount] = useState(false);
useEffect(() => {
setDidMount(true);
return () => setDidMount(false);
}, [])
if(!didMount) {
return null;
}
return (
<ArtistProfileContainer>
<AlbumContainer>
{artistData ? artistData.artistAlbums.items.map(album => {
return (
<AlbumTag
image={album.images[0].url}
name={album.name}
artists={album.artists}
key={album.id}
/>
)
})
: null}
</AlbumContainer>
</ArtistProfileContainer>
)
Hope this will help you.
I had a similar issue with a scroll to top and #CalosVallejo answer solved it :) Thank you so much!!
const ScrollToTop = () => {
const [showScroll, setShowScroll] = useState();
//------------------ solution
useEffect(() => {
checkScrollTop();
return () => {
setShowScroll({}); // This worked for me
};
}, []);
//----------------- solution
const checkScrollTop = () => {
setShowScroll(true);
};
const scrollTop = () => {
window.scrollTo({ top: 0, behavior: "smooth" });
};
window.addEventListener("scroll", checkScrollTop);
return (
<React.Fragment>
<div className="back-to-top">
<h1
className="scrollTop"
onClick={scrollTop}
style={{ display: showScroll }}
>
{" "}
Back to top <span>⟶ </span>
</h1>
</div>
</React.Fragment>
);
};
I have getting same warning, This solution Worked for me ->
useEffect(() => {
const unsubscribe = fetchData(); //subscribe
return unsubscribe; //unsubscribe
}, []);
if you have more then one fetch function then
const getData = () => {
fetch1();
fetch2();
fetch3();
}
useEffect(() => {
const unsubscribe = getData(); //subscribe
return unsubscribe; //unsubscribe
}, []);
This error occurs when u perform state update on current component after navigating to other component:
for example
axios
.post(API.BASE_URI + API.LOGIN, { email: username, password: password })
.then((res) => {
if (res.status === 200) {
dispatch(login(res.data.data)); // line#5 logging user in
setSigningIn(false); // line#6 updating some state
} else {
setSigningIn(false);
ToastAndroid.show(
"Email or Password is not correct!",
ToastAndroid.LONG
);
}
})
In above case on line#5 I'm dispatching login action which in return navigates user to the dashboard and hence login screen now gets unmounted.
Now when React Native reaches as line#6 and see there is state being updated, it yells out loud that how do I do this, the login component is there no more.
Solution:
axios
.post(API.BASE_URI + API.LOGIN, { email: username, password: password })
.then((res) => {
if (res.status === 200) {
setSigningIn(false); // line#6 updating some state -- moved this line up
dispatch(login(res.data.data)); // line#5 logging user in
} else {
setSigningIn(false);
ToastAndroid.show(
"Email or Password is not correct!",
ToastAndroid.LONG
);
}
})
Just move react state update above, move line 6 up the line 5.
Now state is being updated before navigating the user away. WIN WIN
there are many answers but I thought I could demonstrate more simply how the abort works (at least how it fixed the issue for me):
useEffect(() => {
// get abortion variables
let abortController = new AbortController();
let aborted = abortController.signal.aborted; // true || false
async function fetchResults() {
let response = await fetch(`[WEBSITE LINK]`);
let data = await response.json();
aborted = abortController.signal.aborted; // before 'if' statement check again if aborted
if (aborted === false) {
// All your 'set states' inside this kind of 'if' statement
setState(data);
}
}
fetchResults();
return () => {
abortController.abort();
};
}, [])
Other Methods:
https://medium.com/wesionary-team/how-to-fix-memory-leak-issue-in-react-js-using-hook-a5ecbf9becf8
If the user navigates away, or something else causes the component to get destroyed before the async call comes back and tries to setState on it, it will cause the error. It's generally harmless if it is, indeed, a late-finish async call. There's a couple of ways to silence the error.
If you're implementing a hook like useAsync you can declare your useStates with let instead of const, and, in the destructor returned by useEffect, set the setState function(s) to a no-op function.
export function useAsync<T, F extends IUseAsyncGettor<T>>(gettor: F, ...rest: Parameters<F>): IUseAsync<T> {
let [parameters, setParameters] = useState(rest);
if (parameters !== rest && parameters.some((_, i) => parameters[i] !== rest[i]))
setParameters(rest);
const refresh: () => void = useCallback(() => {
const promise: Promise<T | void> = gettor
.apply(null, parameters)
.then(value => setTuple([value, { isLoading: false, promise, refresh, error: undefined }]))
.catch(error => setTuple([undefined, { isLoading: false, promise, refresh, error }]));
setTuple([undefined, { isLoading: true, promise, refresh, error: undefined }]);
return promise;
}, [gettor, parameters]);
useEffect(() => {
refresh();
// and for when async finishes after user navs away //////////
return () => { setTuple = setParameters = (() => undefined) }
}, [refresh]);
let [tuple, setTuple] = useState<IUseAsync<T>>([undefined, { isLoading: true, refresh, promise: Promise.resolve() }]);
return tuple;
}
That won't work well in a component, though. There, you can wrap useState in a function which tracks mounted/unmounted, and wraps the returned setState function with the if-check.
export const MyComponent = () => {
const [numPendingPromises, setNumPendingPromises] = useUnlessUnmounted(useState(0));
// ..etc.
// imported from elsewhere ////
export function useUnlessUnmounted<T>(useStateTuple: [val: T, setVal: Dispatch<SetStateAction<T>>]): [T, Dispatch<SetStateAction<T>>] {
const [val, setVal] = useStateTuple;
const [isMounted, setIsMounted] = useState(true);
useEffect(() => () => setIsMounted(false), []);
return [val, newVal => (isMounted ? setVal(newVal) : () => void 0)];
}
You could then create a useStateAsync hook to streamline a bit.
export function useStateAsync<T>(initialState: T | (() => T)): [T, Dispatch<SetStateAction<T>>] {
return useUnlessUnmounted(useState(initialState));
}
Try to add the dependencies in useEffect:
useEffect(() => {
fetchData()
return () => { props.spotifyAPI.cancelRequest() }
}, [fetchData, props.spotifyAPI])
Usually this problem occurs when you showing the component conditionally, for example:
showModal && <Modal onClose={toggleModal}/>
You can try to do some little tricks in the Modal onClose function, like
setTimeout(onClose, 0)
This works for me :')
const [state, setState] = useState({});
useEffect( async ()=>{
let data= await props.data; // data from API too
setState(users);
},[props.data]);
I had this problem in React Native iOS and fixed it by moving my setState call into a catch. See below:
Bad code (caused the error):
const signupHandler = async (email, password) => {
setLoading(true)
try {
const token = await createUser(email, password)
authContext.authenticate(token)
} catch (error) {
Alert.alert('Error', 'Could not create user.')
}
setLoading(false) // this line was OUTSIDE the catch call and triggered an error!
}
Good code (no error):
const signupHandler = async (email, password) => {
setLoading(true)
try {
const token = await createUser(email, password)
authContext.authenticate(token)
} catch (error) {
Alert.alert('Error', 'Could not create user.')
setLoading(false) // moving this line INTO the catch call resolved the error!
}
}
Similar problem with my app, I use a useEffect to fetch some data, and then update a state with that:
useEffect(() => {
const fetchUser = async() => {
const {
data: {
queryUser
},
} = await authFetch.get(`/auth/getUser?userId=${createdBy}`);
setBlogUser(queryUser);
};
fetchUser();
return () => {
setBlogUser(null);
};
}, [_id]);
This improves upon Carlos Vallejo's answer.
useEffect(() => {
let abortController = new AbortController();
// your async action is here
return () => {
abortController.abort();
}
}, []);
in the above code, I've used AbortController to unsubscribe the effect. When the a sync action is completed, then I abort the controller and unsubscribe the effect.
it work for me ....
The easy way
let fetchingFunction= async()=>{
// fetching
}
React.useEffect(() => {
fetchingFunction();
return () => {
fetchingFunction= null
}
}, [])
options={{
filterType: "checkbox"
,
textLabels: {
body: {
noMatch: isLoading ?
:
'Sorry, there is no matching data to display',
},
},
}}

RxJS retry only last item, blocking the stream

I'm trying to use RxJS to process a stream of items, and I would like for it to retry any failures, preferentially with a delay (and exponential backoff if possible), but I need to guarantee the ordering so I effectively want to block the stream, and I don't want to reprocess any items that were already processed
So I was trying to play with retryWhen, following this example:
const { interval, timer } = Rx;
const { take, map, retryWhen, delayWhen, tap } = RxOperators;
const source = take(5)(interval(1000));
source.pipe(
map(val => {
if (val >= 3) {
throw val;
}
return val;
}),
retryWhen(errors =>
errors.pipe(
delayWhen(val => timer(1000))
)
)
);
But the stream restarts at the beginning, it doesn't just retry the last one:
Is it possible to achieve what I want? I tried other operators from docs as well, no luck. Would it be kinda against RxJS philosophy somehow?
The retryWhen should be moved to an inner Observable to handle the failed values only and keep the main Observable working.
Try something like the following:
// import { timer, interval, of } from 'rxjs';
// import { concatMap, delayWhen, map, retryWhen, take } from 'rxjs/operators';
const source = interval(1000).pipe(take(5));
source.pipe(
concatMap((value) =>
of(value).pipe(
map((val) => {
if (val >= 3) {
throw val;
}
return val;
}),
retryWhen((errors) => errors.pipe(delayWhen(() => timer(1000))))
)
)
);

How to handle error and return observable while subscribe inside an observable function in Rxjs Angular

I want to check one api call inside an observable which I will subscribe in a component. As written below, I want to run my observable in this manner but it is not working. What changes shall I do to this code to make it work. Whenever I try to subscribe through it especially through the scenario when someObservableWrittenInTheSameService returns with an error 404, I want to return url2.
getfunction(submissionId: string ){
if (some condition) {
this.someObservableWrittenInTheSameService(parameter).subscribe(
(httpValue: any) => {
let url = '';
if (httpValue.code === 200) {
return this.http.get(url1);
}
}, err => {
if (err.code === 404) {
return this.http.get(url2);
}
}
)
}
let url3
return this.http.get(url3);
}
This function is then is called in a component where it is subscribed. But whenever someObservableWrittenInTheSameService return 404, the subscription always fails and go to error block in the component.
You could use RxJS iif function to return an observable conditionally.
Use RxJS higher order mappping operator switchMap to map from one observable to another. More info here.
Use catchError operator to perform error handling. From it's body you could either return the HTTP request or forward the error (using throwError) or even complete the observable (using EMPTY constant) based on your requirement.
Try the following
import { Observable, EMPTY, iif, throwError } from 'rxjs';
import { switchMap, catchError } from 'rxjs/operators';
getfunction(submissionId: string): Observable<any> { // <-- observable must be returned here
const obs1$ = this.someObservableWrittenInTheSameService(parameter).pipe(
switchMap((httpValue: any) =>
iif(
() => httpValue.code === 200,
this.http.get(url1),
EMPTY // <-- complete the observable if code is other than 200
)
),
catchError((error: any) => // <-- `catchError` operator *must* return an observable
iif(
() => error.code === 404,
this.http.get(url2),
throwError(error) // <-- you could also return `EMPTY` to complete the observable
)
)
const obs2$ = this.http.get(url3);
return iif(
() => someCondition,
obs1$,
obs2$
);
}
In this case you'd subscribe to the getFunction() function where it's used.
For eg.
this.getFunction('some value').subscribe({
next: (value: any) => { },
error: (error: any) => { },
complete: () => { }
});

`.pipe()` not executing `debounceTime`

I'm trying to debounce() an Observable with pipe() and chaining .subscribe() but for some reason the function in the subscribe is still being called over a dozen times in one go.
What I'm trying to do is pipe the withChangesForTables and debounce the sync call because I want it to be called only when a whole batch of changes have been made. So I created a provider for the sync and wrapped it around my RootNavigator
withChangesForTables on WatermelonDB source code
const SyncContext = createContext();
function useSync() {
return useContext(SyncContext);
}
function SyncProvider({children}) {
const [isSyncing, setIsSyncing] = useState(false);
const [hasUnsynced, setHasUnsynced] = useState(false);
async function checkUnsyncedChanges() {
const hasChanges = await hasUnsyncedChanges({
database
});
setHasUnsynced(hasChanges);
}
async function sync() {
await checkUnsyncedChanges();
if (!isSyncing && hasUnsynced) {
setIsSyncing(true);
await synchronizeWithServer();
setIsSyncing(false);
}
}
database.withChangesForTables([
'table_name',
'table_name2'
]).pipe(
skip(1),
// ignore records simply becoming `synced`
filter(changes => !changes.every(change => change.record.syncStatus === 'synced')),
// debounce to avoid syncing in the middle of related actions - I put 100000 to test only
debounceTime(100000),
).subscribe({
//calls API endpoint to sync local DB with server
next: () => sync(),
error: e => console.log(e)
});
const value = {
isSyncing,
hasUnsynced,
checkUnsyncedChanges,
sync
};
return (
<SyncContext.Provider value={value}>
{children}
</SyncContext.Provider>
);
}
I had to move withChangesForTables into a useEffect and retrun it in order to unsubcribe which seems to have resolved the issue. The code now looks something like this:
useEffect(() => {
return database.withChangesForTables([
'table_name',
'table_name2'
]).pipe(
skip(1),
filter(changes => !changes.every(change => change.record.syncStatus === 'synced')),
debounceTime(500),
).subscribe({
next: () => sync(),
error: e => console.log(e)
});
}, [])

timeout() operator not working in pipe Rxjs subject

I have an Issue with timeout operator in subject.
my problem look like sample above, but I got all of source,
response:
observable: 1
observable: 2
url: https://stackblitz.com/edit/ou5yp1?file=index.ts
import { Subject, from,Observable } from 'rxjs';
import {timeout} from 'rxjs/operators';
const subject = new Subject();
subject.subscribe({
next: (v) => console.log(`observer: ${v}`),
error: (e) => console.log(`There is an Error ${e}`)
});
subject.pipe(timeout(2000));
const observable = new Observable( sub=> {
sub.next( 1);
setTimeout(()=> {
sub.next(2)
},5000)
})
observable.subscribe(subject);
You have subscribed to wrong observable.
subject.pipe(timeout(2000));
The above line does not apply to subject itself, but instead returns a new observable which has 2 seconds timeout. So you should subscribe to this returned observable instead of subject itself. So your code should be:
subject.pipe(timeout(2000)).subscribe({
next: (v) => console.log(`observer: ${v}`),
error: (e) => console.log(`There is an Error ${e}`)
});

Categories

Resources