create an Observable that emits a sequence of integers spaced by a given time interval
The Interval operator returns an Observable that emits an infinite sequence of ascending integers, with a constant interval of time of your choosing between emissions.
interval
RxGroovy implements this operator as interval. It accepts as its parameters a span of time to wait between emissions and the TimeUnit in which this span is measured.
interval(long,TimeUnit)
interval(long,TimeUnit,Scheduler)
There is also a version of interval that returns an Observable that emits a single zero after a specified delay, and then emits incrementally increasing numbers periodically thereafter on a specified periodicity. This version of interval was called timer in RxGroovy 1.0.0, but that method has since been deprecated in favor of the one named interval with the same behavior.
interval(long,long,TimeUnit)
interval(long,long,TimeUnit,Scheduler)
interval operates by default on the computation Scheduler. There are also variants that allow you to set the Scheduler by passing one in as a parameter.
interval
RxJava implements this operator as interval. It accepts as its parameters a span of time to wait between emissions and the TimeUnit in which this span is measured.
interval(long,TimeUnit)
interval(long,TimeUnit,Scheduler)
There is also a version of interval that returns an Observable that emits a single zero after a specified delay, and then emits incrementally increasing numbers periodically thereafter on a specified periodicity. This version of interval was called timer in RxJava 1.0.0, but that method has since been deprecated in favor of the one named interval with the same behavior.
interval(long,long,TimeUnit)
interval(long,long,TimeUnit,Scheduler)
interval operates by default on the computation Scheduler. There are also variants that allow you to set the Scheduler by passing one in as a parameter.
interval
RxJS implements this operator as interval. It accepts as its parameter the number of milliseconds to wait between emissions.
interval operates by default on the timeout Scheduler, or you can optionally pass in a different Scheduler as a second parameter, and interval will operate on that Scheduler instead.
var source = Rx.Observable
.interval(500 /* ms */)
.timeInterval()
.take(3);
var subscription = source.subscribe(
function (x) {
console.log('Next: ' + x);
},
function (err) {
console.log('Error: ' + err);
},
function () {
console.log('Completed');
});
Next: {value: 0, interval: 500}
Next: {value: 1, interval: 500}
Next: {value: 2, interval: 500}
Completed interval is found in the following distributions:
rx.lite.jsrx.lite.compat.jsrx.timejs (requires rx.js or rx.compat.js)interval RxPHP implements this operator as interval.
Returns an Observable that emits an infinite sequence of ascending integers starting at 0, with a constant interval of time of your choosing between emissions.
//from https://github.com/ReactiveX/RxPHP/blob/master/demo/interval/interval.php
\Rx\Observable::interval(1000)
->take(5)
->subscribe($createStdoutObserver()); Next value: 0 Next value: 1 Next value: 2 Next value: 3 Next value: 4 Complete!
© ReactiveX contributors
Licensed under the Apache License 2.0.
http://reactivex.io/documentation/operators/interval.html