|  

[Packt] Hands-On Reactive Programming with Java 12 [FCO] GloDLS



Size :553.89 MB
Peers : Seeders : 0      Leechers : 0
Added : 5 years ago » by SaM » in Tutorials
Language : English
Last Updated :7 months ago
Info_Hash :D348190FD636DF74C751486767CCD0E38746FF73

Torrent File Contents

[Packt] Hands-On Reactive Programming with Java 12 [FCO] GloDLS
  01.Reactive API – Most Important Aspects/0101.The Course Overview.mp4
  -  15.69 MB

  01.Reactive API – Most Important Aspects/0102.Flow The Main Entry Point of Every Reactive App.mp4
  -  85.46 MB

  01.Reactive API – Most Important Aspects/0103.Subscriber versus Publisher When to Use Which.mp4
  -  21.32 MB

  01.Reactive API – Most Important Aspects/0104.Hot Publisher Why It Is Hard to Take Control Over It.mp4
  -  15.36 MB

  01.Reactive API – Most Important Aspects/0105.Cold Publisher Pairing with Back Pressure.mp4
  -  16.48 MB

  02.Publishing and Consuming Messages Starting Stock Exchange Application/0201.Consuming Messages Creating a Subscriber.mp4
  -  17.48 MB

  02.Publishing and Consuming Messages Starting Stock Exchange Application/0202.Using Publisher to Emit Stock Events.mp4
  -  11.72 MB

  02.Publishing and Consuming Messages Starting Stock Exchange Application/0203.Testing Stock Reactive Flow.mp4
  -  15.49 MB

  02.Publishing and Consuming Messages Starting Stock Exchange Application/0204.Handling Errors in Subscriber.mp4
  -  21.18 MB

  03.Transformation of Messages/0301.Flow.Processor API for the Skeleton of Transformation.mp4
  -  16.43 MB

  03.Transformation of Messages/0302.Using SubmissionPublisher for Proxying Event to Another Publisher in the Chain.mp4
  -  9.31 MB

  03.Transformation of Messages/0303.Plugging the TransformProcessor for Transformation Logic.mp4
  -  12.12 MB

  03.Transformation of Messages/0304.Testing Stock Transformation Logic.mp4
  -  17.04 MB

  04.Solving the Problem of Overproducing Publisher with Backpressure/0401.Leveraging Subscription Object for Controlling the Number of Fetched Stocks.mp4
  -  17.34 MB

  04.Solving the Problem of Overproducing Publisher with Backpressure/0402.Controlling the Speed of Consumer with AtomicInteger.mp4
  -  17.24 MB

  04.Solving the Problem of Overproducing Publisher with Backpressure/0403.Creating Overproducing Publisher.mp4
  -  17.16 MB

  04.Solving the Problem of Overproducing Publisher with Backpressure/0404.Testing Backpressure in Stock Exchange Application.mp4
  -  11.82 MB

  05.Reactive Java 12 with Alternative Implementations/0502.RxJava – Advanced Operations – flatMap.mp4
  -  18.31 MB

  05.Reactive Java 12 with Alternative Implementations/0503.Reactor – Flux.mp4
  -  18.87 MB

  05.Reactive Java 12 with Alternative Implementations/0504.Reactor – Combining Publishers.mp4
  -  18.18 MB

  06.Reactive Microservices/0601.Reactive Spring Boot.mp4
  -  15.57 MB

  06.Reactive Microservices/0602.Creating Reactive Data Access Layer.mp4
  -  20.46 MB

  06.Reactive Microservices/0603.Creating Reactive Controller.mp4
  -  47.13 MB

  06.Reactive Microservices/0604.Testing Reactive Microservices.mp4
  -  76.49 MB

  Exercise Files/exercise_files.zip
  -  21.49 KB

  Discuss.FTUForum.com.html
  -  31.89 KB

  FreeCoursesOnline.Me.html
  -  108.3 KB

  FTUForum.com.html
  -  100.44 KB

  How you can help Team-FTU.txt
  -  235 Bytes

  [TGx]Downloaded from torrentgalaxy.org.txt
  -  524 Bytes

  Torrent Downloaded From GloDls.buzz.txt
  -  84 Bytes



Torrent Description

Description:


By: Tomasz Lelek
Released: Saturday, March 30, 2019 [New Release!]
Torrent Contains: 32 Files, 7 Folders
Course Source: https://www.packtpub.com/application-development/hands-reactive-programming-java-12-video

Create robust and maintainable Java applications using the Reactive programming style

Video Details

ISBN 9781789808773
Course Length 1 hours 51 minutes

Table of Contents

• REACTIVE API – MOST IMPORTANT ASPECTS
• PUBLISHING AND CONSUMING MESSAGES: STARTING STOCK EXCHANGE APPLICATION
• TRANSFORMATION OF MESSAGES
• SOLVING THE PROBLEM OF OVERPRODUCING PUBLISHER WITH BACKPRESSURE
• REACTIVE JAVA 12 WITH ALTERNATIVE IMPLEMENTATIONS
• REACTIVE MICROSERVICES

Video Description

Reactive programming is a programming paradigm oriented toward data flows and the propagation of change: programming with asynchronous data streams. Apps in recent times have an abundance of real-time events of every kind that create a highly interactive experience for the user. However, the right tools are needed to manage these, and Reactive programming is the answer.

This course is a step-by-step guide to creating applications with Java 12 by applying Reactive programming. You will get hands-on experience; each section will build on the previous one, so that you will be able to make your app responsive and reliable by implementing Reactive principles with Java. You'll also apply the best data structures and algorithms that optimize functions—all using functional Reactive programming.

By the end of this course, you'll be fully equipped with the tools and techniques needed to implement robust, event-driven, and Reactive applications.

Style and Approach

This step-by-step and fast-paced guide will help you use the Reactive API in your applications. After completing this course, you will be confident enough to build fully Reactive applications.

What You Will Learn

• Understand Flow, the main building block of Reactive applications
• Implement publisher and subscriber parties independently of each other
• Discover the difference between Hot and Cold Publisher
• Create multiple flow consumers via the Subscriber API
• Perform Reactive transformations using the TransformProcessor API
• Focus on the pros and cons of alternative Reactive frameworks, Reactor, and RxJava

Authors

Tomasz Lelek

Tomasz Lelek is a Software Engineer, programming mostly in Java, Scala. He has worked with ML algorithms for the past 5 years, with production experience in processing petabytes of data.
He is passionate about nearly everything associated with software development and believes that we should always try to consider different solutions and approaches before solving a problem. Recently he was a speaker at conferences in Poland, Confitura and JDD (Java Developers Day), and also at Krakow Scala User Group. He has also conducted a live coding session at Geecon Conference.

He is a co-founder of www.initlearn.com, an e-learning platform that was built with the Java language.

He has also written articles about everything related to the Java world: http://www.baeldung.com/.