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Reactive Programming With Java And Project Reactor - OneDDL - 11-22-2024 Free Download Reactive Programming With Java And Project Reactor Published 11/2024 MP4 | Video: h264, 1920x1080 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz Language: English | Size: 1017.74 MB | Duration: 3h 23m Learn the core principles of reactive programming, the foundation of Spring WebFlux's reactive stack. What you'll learn Essential principles of reactive programming and reactive systems Concepts of Reactive Streams that serve as a foundation for reactive programming Using Project Reactor with Java to create projects How to use creation, transformation, and filtering operators in Project Reactor How to handle error scenarios in reactive programming How to combine data streams with operators Using Schedulers with reactive programming Backpressure strategies Requirements Intermediate knowledge in Java Knowledge of the Java 8 Streams API Description In this practical and focused course, you'll learn about Reactive Programming with a focus on Project Reactor, a widely recognized Java library that simplifies building reactive, non-blocking systems.This course is designed for software developers who want to enhance their skills in reactive programming and explore Project Reactor as a powerful tool. It's ideal for Java developers and anyone interested in creating highly responsive and efficient systems.You'll learn about reactive data streams, handling concurrency, error management, and more. By the end of the course, you'll have a solid understanding of reactive programming.What You Will Learn:Core Concepts: Explore the essential principles of reactive programming, including reactive systems, synchronous and asynchronous flows, non-blocking operations, and event propagation in data streams.Reactive Streams: Dive into Reactive Streams, which provide the foundation for reactive programming, enabling applications to dynamically react to events and data flows.Introduction to Project Reactor: Discover Project Reactor, getting to know its key components like Flux and Mono, and learn how to use them to create reactive applications.Creation Operators: Explore Project Reactor's creation operators, which let you generate reactive data streams from various sources, such as collections, expanding your options for building reactive applications.Operators: Learn how to apply transformation and filter operators to shape reactive data streams to fit your needs.Combining Streams: Understand how to combine, merge, and aggregate data streams efficiently.Error Handling: Learn effective strategies for error handling and recovery in reactive environments.Schedulers: Understand the importance of Schedulers in reactive programming and learn how to manage concurrency and optimize task execution for efficient systems.Backpressure: Learn to manage backpressure, a key technique to ensure data streams are processed efficiently, preventing overload. Overview Section 1: Introduction Lecture 1 About the Course and Prerequisites Lecture 2 Course Materials Section 2: Important Concepts Lecture 3 Traditional System vs Reactive System Lecture 4 Reactive Manifesto Lecture 5 Core Principles of Reactive Programming Lecture 6 Summary Lecture 7 Want to Learn More About the Event Loop? Section 3: Reactive Streams Lecture 8 Introduction Lecture 9 Implementing the ✅Publisher Lecture 10 Implementing the Subscriber Lecture 11 Implementing the Subscription Lecture 12 Running the Example Lecture 13 Summary Section 4: Introduction to Project Reactor Lecture 14 What is Project Reactor? Lecture 15 Implementing Project Reactor 1 Lecture 16 Implementing Project Reactor 2 Lecture 17 Summary Section 5: Creation Operators Lecture 18 Understanding How Operators Work Lecture 19 Basic Creation Operators Lecture 20 Flux().create() Operator Lecture 21 Flux().create() Operator in Practice Lecture 22 Flux().generate() Operator Lecture 23 Flux().generate() Operator in Practice Lecture 24 Summary Section 6: Operators Lecture 25 How the take() Operator Works in a Stream Lecture 26 take() and takeWhile() Operators Lecture 27 map() Operator Lecture 28 flatMap() Operator - Part 1 Lecture 29 flatMap() Operator - Part 2 Lecture 30 filter() Operator Lecture 31 delayElements() Operator Lecture 32 transform() Operator Lecture 33 Side Effects Operators Lecture 34 Summary Section 7: Combining Streams with Operators Lecture 35 concat Operator Lecture 36 merge() Operator Lecture 37 zip() Operator Lecture 38 Summary Section 8: Error Handling Lecture 39 onErrorReturn Operator Lecture 40 onErrorResume Operator Lecture 41 onErrorContinue Operator Lecture 42 onErrorComplete Operator Lecture 43 onErrorMap Operator Lecture 44 isEmpty and defaultIfEmpty Operators Lecture 45 retry and retryWhen Operator Lecture 46 Summary Section 9: Schedulers Lecture 47 Example of Blocking Operation Lecture 48 How Schedulers Work Lecture 49 Using Schedulers in Practice Lecture 50 Parallel Processing with Schedulers Lecture 51 Parallel Processing with Schedulers in Practice Lecture 52 Summary Section 10: Backpressure Lecture 53 onBackpressureBuffer Strategy: Part 1 Lecture 54 onBackpressureBuffer Strategy: Part 2 Lecture 55 onBackpressureError Strategy Lecture 56 onBackpressureDrop Strategy Lecture 57 onBackpressureLatest Strategy Lecture 58 Defining Backpressure Strategy in the Flux.create() Operator Lecture 59 Summary Section 11: Hot and Cold ✅Publisher Lecture 60 Difference Between a Cold ✅Publisher and a Hot ✅Publisher Lecture 61 Creating a Hot ✅Publisher with the autoConnect() Operator Lecture 62 Creating a Hot ✅Publisher with the autoConnect(n) Operator Lecture 63 Creating a Hot ✅Publisher with the share() and refCount() Operators Lecture 64 Summary People interested in starting with reactive programming in Java.,Developers who want to learn about Project Reactor before diving into WebFlux to build a stronger foundation.,Java developers and anyone interested in building highly responsive and efficient systems. 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