Search

You can now search through our archive !
Please specify a keyword

  • Issue #323

    Achieving Concurrency in RxJava

    While at Chicago Roboto, Huyen catches up with Nick Cruz, fellow speaker and developer at Verily, and asks him about achieving concurrency in RxJava as well as the handiness of TestScheduler.
  • Issue #323

    RxAndroid’s New Async API

    Zac Sweers announces a new async parameter that affects Android APIs 16 and newer, and can significantly improve UI performance when set to true if your app makes heavy use of RxJava+RxAndroid.
  • Issue #321

    RxRedux

    Redux implementation based on RxJava
  • Issue #317

    Senior Android Developer

    If you join our Android team you will work with the following technologies: RxJava, Dagger 2, Retrofit, JUnit, Mockito and Espresso. To get there, you'll need: 3+ years of experience programming with Android, Solid architecture knowledge, Ability to write clean, easy-to-read code. Understand why:
  • Issue #316

    Senior Android Developer

    If you join our Android team you will work with the following technologies: RxJava, Dagger 2, Retrofit, JUnit, Mockito and Espresso. To get there, you'll need: 3+ years of experience programming with Android, Solid architecture knowledge, Ability to write clean, easy-to-read code. Understand why:
  • Issue #315

    Senior Android Developer

    If you join our Android team you will work with the following technologies: RxJava, Dagger 2, Retrofit, JUnit, Mockito and Espresso. To get there, you'll need: 3+ years of experience programming with Android, Solid architecture knowledge, Ability to write clean, easy-to-read code. Understand why:
  • Issue #314

    Senior Android Developer

    If you join our Android team you will work with the following technologies: RxJava, Dagger 2, Retrofit, JUnit, Mockito and Espresso. To get there, you'll need: 3+ years of experience programming with Android, Solid architecture knowledge, Ability to write clean, easy-to-read code. Understand why:
  • Issue #313

    RxJava Backpressure and why you should care

    M. Reza Nasirloo explains what backpressure is in RxJava, why it's important, and various approaches to handling it.
  • Issue #313

    Reactive Android Permissions in a breeze

    This is an introductionary blog post for RxPermission. RxPermission is library to get Android Permission in a reactive way and its a fork (from a RxJava) that has been rewritten to support RxJava 2. Be sure to check out the code as well.
  • Issue #311

    Chaining LiveData like RxJava with Kotlin extension

    In this article, Henry Tao talks about how we can borrow some ideas from RxJava and apply them to LiveData.
  • Issue #311

    Riddling your way to master RxJava

    To help everyone with the initial steps of learning the Rx, Niklas Baudy composed a few riddles that can be solved to learn RxJava and it’s operators.
  • Issue #311

    RxRiddles

    This repository contains some small for RxJava to help you learn and master RxJava. There is an accompanying medium article that gives some more information.
  • Issue #309

    Coroutines and RxJava  (Part 5): Operators

    In previous parts, Manuel Vicente Vivo talked about transferring stream of values and the Coroutines and RxJava interop library. In this article it’s time to compare how we can transform those streams with Operators.
  • Issue #308

    RxJava to Kotlin coroutines

    This post is a summary of how Chris Banes refactored an app which uses RxJava pretty heavily, to one which uses Kotlin coroutines too. Specifically, he talks about switching out Single/Maybe/Completable sources to coroutines.
  • Issue #307

    Coroutines and RxJava — An Asynchronicity Comparison (Part 4)

    Manuel Vicente Vivo continues his series, introducing a library for interop between RxJava and Coroutines.
  • Issue #304

    Coroutines and RxJava — An Asynchronicity Comparison (Part 1)

    In this blog series, Manuel Vicente Vivo compares Kotlin Coroutines and RxJava on different topics since they are trying to solve a common problem in Android development: Asynchronous Programming.
  • Issue #304

    RxJava & State: The Basics

    Laimonas Turauskas has been using a reactive functional approach to manage state. Here he shows examples of how to implement this using RxJava.
  • Issue #303

    Android Engineer

    Babylon Health is a healthcare startup with a mission to put accessible and affordable healthcare in the hands of every person on earth. We are looking for Android Engineers to join our team, working with Kotlin, Clean Architecture and most popular open source libraries like Dagger 2 and RxJava 2.
  • Issue #303

    Kotlin coroutines vs RxJava: an initial performance test

    Andrea Bresolin was curious to evaluate Kotlin coroutines and RxJava in terms of performance, so I’ve decided to create some simple tests.
  • Issue #298

    Android Engineer @ Scoop

    Scoop brings co-workers and neighbors together into a smooth carpooling experience. Built around solid engineering principles and standard tools like RxJava and Retrofit, our app needs talented Android engineers to tackle exciting features while we power through rapid growth.
  • Issue #298

    RxTest

    RxTest is a Kotlin library for testing RxJava
  • Issue #297

    Android Engineer @ Scoop

    Scoop brings co-workers and neighbors together into a smooth carpooling experience. Built around solid engineering principles and standard tools like RxJava and Retrofit, our app needs talented Android engineers to tackle exciting features while we power through rapid growth.
  • Issue #297

    RxBasicsKata

    A set of simple code challenges to learn RxJava using JUnit tests as an acceptance criteria. Focused on some basic concepts and doesn't cover any Android topics yet.
  • Issue #296

    Android Engineer @ Scoop

    Scoop brings co-workers and neighbors together into a smooth carpooling experience. Built around solid engineering principles and standard tools like RxJava and Retrofit, our app needs talented Android engineers to tackle exciting features while we power through rapid growth.
  • Issue #295

    Android Engineer @ Scoop

    Scoop brings co-workers and neighbors together into a smooth carpooling experience. Built around solid engineering principles and standard tools like RxJava and Retrofit, our app needs talented Android engineers to tackle exciting features while we power through rapid growth.