1147
votes

I've read the Wikipedia article on reactive programming. I've also read the small article on functional reactive programming. The descriptions are quite abstract.

  1. What does functional reactive programming (FRP) mean in practice?
  2. What does reactive programming (as opposed to non-reactive programming?) consist of?

My background is in imperative/OO languages, so an explanation that relates to this paradigm would be appreciated.

8
  • 159
    here's a guy with an active imagination and good storytelling skills take on the whole thing. paulstovell.com/reactive-programming
    – melaos
    Jan 5, 2010 at 1:24
  • 39
    Somebody really needs to write a "Functional Reactive Programming For Dummies" for all us autodidacts out here. Every resource I've found, even Elm, seems to assume you've gotten a Master's in CS in the last five years. Those knowledgable about FRP seem to have completely lost the ability to see the matter from the naive viewpoint, something critical to teaching, training and evangelizing.
    – TechZen
    May 4, 2014 at 13:48
  • 26
    Another excellent FRP intro: The introduction to Reactive Programming you've been missing by my colleague André
    – Jonik
    Jul 2, 2014 at 21:01
  • 5
    One of the best i have seen, Example based: gist.github.com/staltz/868e7e9bc2a7b8c1f754
    – Razmig
    Aug 1, 2014 at 11:39
  • 2
    I find the spreadsheet analogy very helpful as a first rough impression (see Bob's answer: stackoverflow.com/a/1033066/1593924). A spreadsheet cell reacts to changes in other cells (pulls) but doesn't reach out and change others (doesn't push). The end result is that you can change one cell and a zillion others 'independently' update their own displays.
    – Jon Coombs
    May 17, 2015 at 1:40

18 Answers 18

930
votes

If you want to get a feel for FRP, you could start with the old Fran tutorial from 1998, which has animated illustrations. For papers, start with Functional Reactive Animation and then follow up on links on the publications link on my home page and the FRP link on the Haskell wiki.

Personally, I like to think about what FRP means before addressing how it might be implemented. (Code without a specification is an answer without a question and thus "not even wrong".) So I don't describe FRP in representation/implementation terms as Thomas K does in another answer (graphs, nodes, edges, firing, execution, etc). There are many possible implementation styles, but no implementation says what FRP is.

I do resonate with Laurence G's simple description that FRP is about "datatypes that represent a value 'over time' ". Conventional imperative programming captures these dynamic values only indirectly, through state and mutations. The complete history (past, present, future) has no first class representation. Moreover, only discretely evolving values can be (indirectly) captured, since the imperative paradigm is temporally discrete. In contrast, FRP captures these evolving values directly and has no difficulty with continuously evolving values.

FRP is also unusual in that it is concurrent without running afoul of the theoretical & pragmatic rats' nest that plagues imperative concurrency. Semantically, FRP's concurrency is fine-grained, determinate, and continuous. (I'm talking about meaning, not implementation. An implementation may or may not involve concurrency or parallelism.) Semantic determinacy is very important for reasoning, both rigorous and informal. While concurrency adds enormous complexity to imperative programming (due to nondeterministic interleaving), it is effortless in FRP.

So, what is FRP? You could have invented it yourself. Start with these ideas:

  • Dynamic/evolving values (i.e., values "over time") are first class values in themselves. You can define them and combine them, pass them into & out of functions. I called these things "behaviors".

  • Behaviors are built up out of a few primitives, like constant (static) behaviors and time (like a clock), and then with sequential and parallel combination. n behaviors are combined by applying an n-ary function (on static values), "point-wise", i.e., continuously over time.

  • To account for discrete phenomena, have another type (family) of "events", each of which has a stream (finite or infinite) of occurrences. Each occurrence has an associated time and value.

  • To come up with the compositional vocabulary out of which all behaviors and events can be built, play with some examples. Keep deconstructing into pieces that are more general/simple.

  • So that you know you're on solid ground, give the whole model a compositional foundation, using the technique of denotational semantics, which just means that (a) each type has a corresponding simple & precise mathematical type of "meanings", and (b) each primitive and operator has a simple & precise meaning as a function of the meanings of the constituents. Never, ever mix implementation considerations into your exploration process. If this description is gibberish to you, consult (a) Denotational design with type class morphisms, (b) Push-pull functional reactive programming (ignoring the implementation bits), and (c) the Denotational Semantics Haskell wikibooks page. Beware that denotational semantics has two parts, from its two founders Christopher Strachey and Dana Scott: the easier & more useful Strachey part and the harder and less useful (for software design) Scott part.

If you stick with these principles, I expect you'll get something more-or-less in the spirit of FRP.

Where did I get these principles? In software design, I always ask the same question: "what does it mean?". Denotational semantics gave me a precise framework for this question, and one that fits my aesthetics (unlike operational or axiomatic semantics, both of which leave me unsatisfied). So I asked myself what is behavior? I soon realized that the temporally discrete nature of imperative computation is an accommodation to a particular style of machine, rather than a natural description of behavior itself. The simplest precise description of behavior I can think of is simply "function of (continuous) time", so that's my model. Delightfully, this model handles continuous, deterministic concurrency with ease and grace.

It's been quite a challenge to implement this model correctly and efficiently, but that's another story.

21
  • 78
    I have been aware of functional reactive programming. It seems related to my own research (in interactive statistical graphics) and I'm sure many of the ideas would be helpful for my work. However, I find it very difficult to get past the language - must I really learn about "denotational semantics" and "type class morphisms" to understand what's going on? A general audience introduction to the topic would be very useful.
    – hadley
    Jun 23, 2009 at 22:19
  • 212
    @Conal: you clearly know what you're talking about, but your language presumes I have a doctorate in computational mathematics, which I do not. I do have a background in systems engineering and 20+ years of experience with computers and programming languages, still I feel your response leaves me baffled. I challenge you to repost your reply in english ;-) Oct 27, 2011 at 17:23
  • 50
    @minplay.dk: Your remarks don't give me much to go on about what in particular you don't understand, and I'm disinclined to make wild guesses about what particular subset of English you're looking for. However, I invite you to say specifically what aspects of my explanation above you're having tripping up on, so that I and others can help you out. For instance, are there particular words you'd like defined or concepts for which you'd like references added? I really do like improving the clarity and accessibility of my writing--without dumbing it down.
    – Conal
    Dec 25, 2011 at 20:20
  • 27
    "Determinacy"/"determinate" means there's a single, well-defined correct value. In contrast, almost all forms of imperative concurrency can give different answers, depending on a scheduler or whether you're looking or not, and they can even deadlock. "Semantic" (and more specifically "denotational") refers to the value ("denotation") of an expression or representation, in contrast to "operational" (how the answer is computed or how much space and/or time is consumed by what kind of machine).
    – Conal
    Feb 11, 2012 at 0:48
  • 18
    I agree with @mindplay.dk although I can't brag of having been in the field for very long. Even though it seemed like you know what you're talking about, it didn't give me a quick, brief and simple understanding of what this is, as I'm spoiled enough to expect on SO. This answer primarily drove me to a ton of new questions without really answering my first one. I'm hoping that sharing the experience of still being relatively ignorant in the field can give you an insight of how simple and brief you really need to be. I come from a similar background as the OP, btw.
    – Aske B.
    Jun 26, 2013 at 20:15
737
votes

In pure functional programming, there are no side-effects. For many types of software (for example, anything with user interaction) side-effects are necessary at some level.

One way to get side-effect like behavior while still retaining a functional style is to use functional reactive programming. This is the combination of functional programming, and reactive programming. (The Wikipedia article you linked to is about the latter.)

The basic idea behind reactive programming is that there are certain datatypes that represent a value "over time". Computations that involve these changing-over-time values will themselves have values that change over time.

For example, you could represent the mouse coordinates as a pair of integer-over-time values. Let's say we had something like (this is pseudo-code):

x = <mouse-x>;
y = <mouse-y>;

At any moment in time, x and y would have the coordinates of the mouse. Unlike non-reactive programming, we only need to make this assignment once, and the x and y variables will stay "up to date" automatically. This is why reactive programming and functional programming work so well together: reactive programming removes the need to mutate variables while still letting you do a lot of what you could accomplish with variable mutations.

If we then do some computations based on this the resulting values will also be values that change over time. For example:

minX = x - 16;
minY = y - 16;
maxX = x + 16;
maxY = y + 16;

In this example, minX will always be 16 less than the x coordinate of the mouse pointer. With reactive-aware libraries you could then say something like:

rectangle(minX, minY, maxX, maxY)

And a 32x32 box will be drawn around the mouse pointer and will track it wherever it moves.

Here is a pretty good paper on functional reactive programming.

21
  • 25
    So reactive programming is a form of declarative programming then?
    – troelskn
    Jun 23, 2009 at 17:50
  • 31
    > So reactive programming is a form of declarative programming then? Functional reactive programming is a form of functional programming, which is a form of declarative programming.
    – Conal
    Jun 23, 2009 at 19:38
  • 7
    @user712092 Not really, no. For example, if I call sqrt(x) in C with your macro, that just computes sqrt(mouse_x()) and gives me back a double. In a true functional reactive system, sqrt(x) would return a new "double over time". If you were to try to simulate an FR system with #define you'd pretty much have to swear off variables in favor of macros. FR systems will also typically only recalculate stuff when it needs to be recalculated, while using macros would mean you'd be constantly re-evaluating everything, all the way down to the subexpressions. May 26, 2012 at 16:53
  • 4
    "For many types of software (for example, anything with user interaction) side-effects are necessary at some level." And perhaps only at the implementation level. There are a lot of side-effects in the implementation of pure, lazy functional programming, and one of the successes of the paradigm is to keep many of those effects out of programming model. My own forays into functional user interfaces suggest that they also can be programmed entirely without side-effects.
    – Conal
    Jun 20, 2012 at 20:41
  • 4
    @tieTYT x is never reassigned/mutated. x's value is the sequence of values over time. Another way to look at it is that instead of x having a "normal" value, like a number, x's value is (conceptually) a function that takes time as a parameter. (This is a bit of an oversimplification. You can't create time values that would allow you to predict the future of things like the mouse position.) Jan 31, 2013 at 20:04
144
votes

An easy way of reaching a first intuition about what it's like is to imagine your program is a spreadsheet and all of your variables are cells. If any of the cells in a spreadsheet change, any cells that refer to that cell change as well. It's just the same with FRP. Now imagine that some of the cells change on their own (or rather, are taken from the outside world): in a GUI situation, the position of the mouse would be a good example.

That necessarily misses out rather a lot. The metaphor breaks down pretty fast when you actually use a FRP system. For one, there are usually attempts to model discrete events as well (e.g. the mouse being clicked). I'm only putting this here to give you an idea what it's like.

2
  • 3
    An extremely apposite example. It's great to have the theoretical stuff, and perhaps some people get the implications of that without recourse to a grounding example, but I need to start with what it does for me, not what it abstractly is. What I only recently got (from the Rx talks by Netflix!) is that RP (or Rx, anyway), makes these "changing values" first class and lets you reason about them, or write functions that do things with them. Write functions to create spreadsheets or cells, if you like. And it handles when a value ends (goes away) and lets you clean up automatically.
    – Benjohn
    Mar 14, 2015 at 19:41
  • This example emphasizes the difference between event-driven programming and reactive approach, where you just declare the dependencies to use intelligent routing.
    – kinjelom
    May 24, 2017 at 13:18
131
votes

To me it is about 2 different meanings of symbol =:

  1. In math x = sin(t) means, that x is different name for sin(t). So writing x + y is the same thing as sin(t) + y. Functional reactive programming is like math in this respect: if you write x + y, it is computed with whatever the value of t is at the time it's used.
  2. In C-like programming languages (imperative languages), x = sin(t) is an assignment: it means that x stores the value of sin(t) taken at the time of the assignment.
3
  • 5
    Good explanation. I think you could also add that "time" in the sense of FRP is normally "any change from external input". Anytime an external force changes an input of FRP, you've moved "time" forward, and recalculate everything again that is affected by the change.
    – Didier A.
    Apr 11, 2015 at 19:21
  • 4
    In math x = sin(t) means x is the value of sin(t) for the given t. It is not a different name for sin(t) as function. Otherwise it would be x(t) = sin(t). May 19, 2016 at 4:54
  • +Dmitri Zaitsev Equals sign has several meanings in mathematics. One of them is that whenever You see left side You can swap it with right side. For example 2 + 3 = 5 or a**2 + b**2 = c**2.
    – user712092
    Nov 10, 2016 at 12:34
69
votes

OK, from background knowledge and from reading the Wikipedia page to which you pointed, it appears that reactive programming is something like dataflow computing but with specific external "stimuli" triggering a set of nodes to fire and perform their computations.

This is pretty well suited to UI design, for example, in which touching a user interface control (say, the volume control on a music playing application) might need to update various display items and the actual volume of audio output. When you modify the volume (a slider, let's say) that would correspond to modifying the value associated with a node in a directed graph.

Various nodes having edges from that "volume value" node would automatically be triggered and any necessary computations and updates would naturally ripple through the application. The application "reacts" to the user stimulus. Functional reactive programming would just be the implementation of this idea in a functional language, or generally within a functional programming paradigm.

For more on "dataflow computing", search for those two words on Wikipedia or using your favorite search engine. The general idea is this: the program is a directed graph of nodes, each performing some simple computation. These nodes are connected to each other by graph links that provide the outputs of some nodes to the inputs of others.

When a node fires or performs its calculation, the nodes connected to its outputs have their corresponding inputs "triggered" or "marked". Any node having all inputs triggered/marked/available automatically fires. The graph might be implicit or explicit depending on exactly how reactive programming is implemented.

Nodes can be looked at as firing in parallel, but often they are executed serially or with limited parallelism (for example, there may be a few threads executing them). A famous example was the Manchester Dataflow Machine, which (IIRC) used a tagged data architecture to schedule execution of nodes in the graph through one or more execution units. Dataflow computing is fairly well suited to situations in which triggering computations asynchronously giving rise to cascades of computations works better than trying to have execution be governed by a clock (or clocks).

Reactive programming imports this "cascade of execution" idea and seems to think of the program in a dataflow-like fashion but with the proviso that some of the nodes are hooked to the "outside world" and the cascades of execution are triggered when these sensory-like nodes change. Program execution would then look like something analogous to a complex reflex arc. The program may or may not be basically sessile between stimuli or may settle into a basically sessile state between stimuli.

"non-reactive" programming would be programming with a very different view of the flow of execution and relationship to external inputs. It's likely to be somewhat subjective, since people will likely be tempted to say anything that responds to external inputs "reacts" to them. But looking at the spirit of the thing, a program that polls an event queue at a fixed interval and dispatches any events found to functions (or threads) is less reactive (because it only attends to user input at a fixed interval). Again, it's the spirit of the thing here: one can imagine putting a polling implementation with a fast polling interval into a system at a very low level and program in a reactive fashion on top of it.

9
  • 1
    OK, there are some good answers up above now. Should I remove my post? If I see two or three people saying it adds nothing, I'll delete it unless its helpful count goes up. No point in leaving it here unless it adds something of value. Jun 23, 2009 at 15:53
  • 3
    you have mentioned data flow, so that adds some value IMHO. Jun 23, 2009 at 17:38
  • That's what QML is meant to be, it seems ;)
    – mlvljr
    Aug 14, 2012 at 19:43
  • 3
    For me, this answer was the easiest to understand, especially because the use of natural analogues like "ripple through the application" and "sensory-like nodes". Great! Feb 15, 2015 at 16:53
  • 1
    unfortunately, the Manchester Dataflow Machine link is dead.
    – Pac0
    Mar 24, 2017 at 8:53
65
votes

After reading many pages about FRP I finally came across this enlightening writing about FRP, it finally made me understand what FRP really is all about.

I quote below Heinrich Apfelmus (author of reactive banana).

What is the essence of functional reactive programming?

A common answer would be that “FRP is all about describing a system in terms of time-varying functions instead of mutable state”, and that would certainly not be wrong. This is the semantic viewpoint. But in my opinion, the deeper, more satisfying answer is given by the following purely syntactic criterion:

The essence of functional reactive programming is to specify the dynamic behavior of a value completely at the time of declaration.

For instance, take the example of a counter: you have two buttons labelled “Up” and “Down” which can be used to increment or decrement the counter. Imperatively, you would first specify an initial value and then change it whenever a button is pressed; something like this:

counter := 0                               -- initial value
on buttonUp   = (counter := counter + 1)   -- change it later
on buttonDown = (counter := counter - 1)

The point is that at the time of declaration, only the initial value for the counter is specified; the dynamic behavior of counter is implicit in the rest of the program text. In contrast, functional reactive programming specifies the whole dynamic behavior at the time of declaration, like this:

counter :: Behavior Int
counter = accumulate ($) 0
            (fmap (+1) eventUp
             `union` fmap (subtract 1) eventDown)

Whenever you want to understand the dynamics of counter, you only have to look at its definition. Everything that can happen to it will appear on the right-hand side. This is very much in contrast to the imperative approach where subsequent declarations can change the dynamic behavior of previously declared values.

So, in my understanding an FRP program is a set of equations: enter image description here

j is discrete: 1,2,3,4...

f depends on t so this incorporates the possiblilty to model external stimuli

all state of the program is encapsulated in variables x_i

The FRP library takes care of progressing time, in other words, taking j to j+1.

I explain these equations in much more detail in this video.

EDIT:

About 2 years after the original answer, recently I came to the conclusion that FRP implementations have another important aspect. They need to (and usually do) solve an important practical problem: cache invalidation.

The equations for x_i-s describe a dependency graph. When some of the x_i changes at time j then not all the other x_i' values at j+1 need to be updated, so not all the dependencies need to be recalculated because some x_i' might be independent from x_i.

Furthermore, x_i-s that do change can be incrementally updated. For example let's consider a map operation f=g.map(_+1) in Scala, where f and g are List of Ints. Here f corresponds to x_i(t_j) and g is x_j(t_j). Now if I prepend an element to g then it would be wasteful to carry out the map operation for all the elements in g. Some FRP implementations (for example reflex-frp) aim to solve this problem. This problem is also known as incremental computing.

In other words, behaviours (the x_i-s ) in FRP can be thought as cache-ed computations. It is the task of the FRP engine to efficiently invalidate and recompute these cache-s (the x_i-s) if some of the f_i-s do change.

4
  • 4
    I was right there with you until you went with discrete equations. The founding idea of FRP was continuous time, where there is no "j+1". Instead, think of functions of continuous time. As Newton, Leibniz, and others showed us, it's often deeply handy (and "natural" in a literal sense) to describe these functions differentially, but continuously so, using integrals and systems of ODEs. Otherwise, you're describing an approximation algorithm (and a poor one) instead of the thing itself.
    – Conal
    Jul 19, 2016 at 14:34
  • The HTML templating and layout constraints language layx seems to express elements of FRP.
    – user246672
    May 10, 2017 at 22:30
  • @Conal this makes me wonder how is FRP different from ODEs. How do they differ ?
    – jhegedus
    Aug 9, 2017 at 4:26
  • @jhegedus In that integration (possibly recursive, i.e., ODEs) provides one of the building blocks of FRP, not the entirety. Every element of the FRP vocabulary (including but not limited to integration) is precisely explained in terms of continuous time. Does that explanation help?
    – Conal
    Aug 19, 2017 at 0:10
29
votes

The paper Simply efficient functional reactivity by Conal Elliott (direct PDF, 233 KB) is a fairly good introduction. The corresponding library also works.

The paper is now superceded by another paper, Push-pull functional reactive programming (direct PDF, 286 KB).

0
28
votes

Disclaimer: my answer is in the context of rx.js - a 'reactive programming' library for Javascript.

In functional programming, instead of iterating through each item of a collection, you apply higher order functions (HoFs) to the collection itself. So the idea behind FRP is that instead of processing each individual event, create a stream of events (implemented with an observable*) and apply HoFs to that instead. This way you can visualize the system as data pipelines connecting publishers to subscribers.

The major advantages of using an observable are:
i) it abstracts away state from your code, e.g., if you want the event handler to get fired only for every 'n'th event, or stop firing after the first 'n' events, or start firing only after the first 'n' events, you can just use the HoFs (filter, takeUntil, skip respectively) instead of setting, updating and checking counters.
ii) it improves code locality - if you have 5 different event handlers changing the state of a component, you can merge their observables and define a single event handler on the merged observable instead, effectively combining 5 event handlers into 1. This makes it very easy to reason about what events in your entire system can affect a component, since it's all present in a single handler.

  • An Observable is the dual of an Iterable.

An Iterable is a lazily consumed sequence - each item is pulled by the iterator whenever it wants to use it, and hence the enumeration is driven by the consumer.

An observable is a lazily produced sequence - each item is pushed to the observer whenever it is added to the sequence, and hence the enumeration is driven by the producer.

2
  • 1
    Thank you so much for this straightforward definition of an observable and its differentiation from iterables. I think it is often very helpful to compare a complex concept with its well-known dual concept to gain a true understanding.
    – user6445533
    Jul 10, 2016 at 7:47
  • 2
    "So the idea behind FRP is that instead of processing each individual event, create a stream of events (implemented with an observable*) and apply HoFs to that instead." I could be mistaken but I believe this is not actually FRP but rather a nice abstraction over the Observer design pattern which allows for functional operations via HoF (which is great!) while still intended to be used with imperative code. Discussion on the topic - lambda-the-ultimate.org/node/4982
    – nqe
    Jan 10, 2017 at 6:35
18
votes

Dude, this is a freaking brilliant idea! Why didn't I find out about this back in 1998? Anyway, here's my interpretation of the Fran tutorial. Suggestions are most welcome, I am thinking about starting a game engine based on this.

import pygame
from pygame.surface import Surface
from pygame.sprite import Sprite, Group
from pygame.locals import *
from time import time as epoch_delta
from math import sin, pi
from copy import copy

pygame.init()
screen = pygame.display.set_mode((600,400))
pygame.display.set_caption('Functional Reactive System Demo')

class Time:
    def __float__(self):
        return epoch_delta()
time = Time()

class Function:
    def __init__(self, var, func, phase = 0., scale = 1., offset = 0.):
        self.var = var
        self.func = func
        self.phase = phase
        self.scale = scale
        self.offset = offset
    def copy(self):
        return copy(self)
    def __float__(self):
        return self.func(float(self.var) + float(self.phase)) * float(self.scale) + float(self.offset)
    def __int__(self):
        return int(float(self))
    def __add__(self, n):
        result = self.copy()
        result.offset += n
        return result
    def __mul__(self, n):
        result = self.copy()
        result.scale += n
        return result
    def __inv__(self):
        result = self.copy()
        result.scale *= -1.
        return result
    def __abs__(self):
        return Function(self, abs)

def FuncTime(func, phase = 0., scale = 1., offset = 0.):
    global time
    return Function(time, func, phase, scale, offset)

def SinTime(phase = 0., scale = 1., offset = 0.):
    return FuncTime(sin, phase, scale, offset)
sin_time = SinTime()

def CosTime(phase = 0., scale = 1., offset = 0.):
    phase += pi / 2.
    return SinTime(phase, scale, offset)
cos_time = CosTime()

class Circle:
    def __init__(self, x, y, radius):
        self.x = x
        self.y = y
        self.radius = radius
    @property
    def size(self):
        return [self.radius * 2] * 2
circle = Circle(
        x = cos_time * 200 + 250,
        y = abs(sin_time) * 200 + 50,
        radius = 50)

class CircleView(Sprite):
    def __init__(self, model, color = (255, 0, 0)):
        Sprite.__init__(self)
        self.color = color
        self.model = model
        self.image = Surface([model.radius * 2] * 2).convert_alpha()
        self.rect = self.image.get_rect()
        pygame.draw.ellipse(self.image, self.color, self.rect)
    def update(self):
        self.rect[:] = int(self.model.x), int(self.model.y), self.model.radius * 2, self.model.radius * 2
circle_view = CircleView(circle)

sprites = Group(circle_view)
running = True
while running:
    for event in pygame.event.get():
        if event.type == QUIT:
            running = False
        if event.type == KEYDOWN and event.key == K_ESCAPE:
            running = False
    screen.fill((0, 0, 0))
    sprites.update()
    sprites.draw(screen)
    pygame.display.flip()
pygame.quit()

In short: If every component can be treated like a number, the whole system can be treated like a math equation, right?

1
14
votes

Paul Hudak's book, The Haskell School of Expression, is not only a fine introduction to Haskell, but it also spends a fair amount of time on FRP. If you're a beginner with FRP, I highly recommend it to give you a sense of how FRP works.

There is also what looks like a new rewrite of this book (released 2011, updated 2014), The Haskell School of Music.

0
10
votes

According to the previous answers, it seems that mathematically, we simply think in a higher order. Instead of thinking a value x having type X, we think of a function x: TX, where T is the type of time, be it the natural numbers, the integers or the continuum. Now when we write y := x + 1 in the programming language, we actually mean the equation y(t) = x(t) + 1.

9
votes

Acts like a spreadsheet as noted. Usually based on an event driven framework.

As with all "paradigms", it's newness is debatable.

From my experience of distributed flow networks of actors, it can easily fall prey to a general problem of state consistency across the network of nodes i.e. you end up with a lot of oscillation and trapping in strange loops.

This is hard to avoid as some semantics imply referential loops or broadcasting, and can be quite chaotic as the network of actors converges (or not) on some unpredictable state.

Similarly, some states may not be reached, despite having well-defined edges, because the global state steers away from the solution. 2+2 may or may not get to be 4 depending on when the 2's became 2, and whether they stayed that way. Spreadsheets have synchronous clocks and loop detection. Distributed actors generally don't.

All good fun :).

8
votes

I found this nice video on the Clojure subreddit about FRP. It is pretty easy to understand even if you don't know Clojure.

Here's the video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nket0K1RXU4

Here's the source the video refers to in the 2nd half: https://github.com/Cicayda/yolk-examples/blob/master/src/yolk_examples/client/autocomplete.cljs

0
7
votes

This article by Andre Staltz is the best and clearest explanation I've seen so far.

Some quotes from the article:

Reactive programming is programming with asynchronous data streams.

On top of that, you are given an amazing toolbox of functions to combine, create and filter any of those streams.

Here's an example of the fantastic diagrams that are a part of the article:

Click event stream diagram

5
votes

It is about mathematical data transformations over time (or ignoring time).

In code this means functional purity and declarative programming.

State bugs are a huge problem in the standard imperative paradigm. Various bits of code may change some shared state at different "times" in the programs execution. This is hard to deal with.

In FRP you describe (like in declarative programming) how data transforms from one state to another and what triggers it. This allows you to ignore time because your function is simply reacting to its inputs and using their current values to create a new one. This means that the state is contained in the graph (or tree) of transformation nodes and is functionally pure.

This massively reduces complexity and debugging time.

Think of the difference between A=B+C in math and A=B+C in a program. In math you are describing a relationship that will never change. In a program, its says that "Right now" A is B+C. But the next command might be B++ in which case A is not equal to B+C. In math or declarative programming A will always be equal to B+C no matter what point in time you ask.

So by removing the complexities of shared state and changing values over time. You program is much easier to reason about.

An EventStream is an EventStream + some transformation function.

A Behaviour is an EventStream + Some value in memory.

When the event fires the value is updated by running the transformation function. The value that this produces is stored in the behaviours memory.

Behaviours can be composed to produce new behaviours that are a transformation on N other behaviours. This composed value will recalculate as the input events (behaviours) fire.

"Since observers are stateless, we often need several of them to simulate a state machine as in the drag example. We have to save the state where it is accessible to all involved observers such as in the variable path above."

Quote from - Deprecating The Observer Pattern http://infoscience.epfl.ch/record/148043/files/DeprecatingObserversTR2010.pdf

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  • This is exactly how I feel about declarative programming, and you just describe the idea better than me.
    – neevek
    Feb 9, 2018 at 6:22
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votes

The short and clear explanation about Reactive Programming appears on Cyclejs - Reactive Programming, it uses simple and visual samples.

A [module/Component/object] is reactive means it is fully responsible for managing its own state by reacting to external events.

What is the benefit of this approach? It is Inversion of Control, mainly because [module/Component/object] is responsible for itself, improving encapsulation using private methods against public ones.

It is a good startup point, not a complete source of knowlege. From there you could jump to more complex and deep papers.

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Check out Rx, Reactive Extensions for .NET. They point out that with IEnumerable you are basically 'pulling' from a stream. Linq queries over IQueryable/IEnumerable are set operations that 'suck' the results out of a set. But with the same operators over IObservable you can write Linq queries that 'react'.

For example, you could write a Linq query like (from m in MyObservableSetOfMouseMovements where m.X<100 and m.Y<100 select new Point(m.X,m.Y)).

and with the Rx extensions, that's it: You have UI code that reacts to the incoming stream of mouse movements and draws whenever you're in the 100,100 box...

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FRP is a combination of Functional programming(programming paradigm built upon the idea of everything is a function) and reactive programming paradigm (built upon the idea that everything is a stream(observer and observable philosophy)). It is supposed to be the best of the worlds.

Check out Andre Staltz post on reactive programming to start with.

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