Futures
provide a simple way to run an asynchronous computation.
Future starts a computation when you create it and then eventually returns the result.
For example, every RPC invocation at Wix is a function that returns a Future
of the RPC service result.
See more information about Futures
API in the documentation
Futures
are composable. We consider the following common cases of Futures
composition:
- Sequential composition with or without error accumulation;
- Concurrent composition with or without error accumulation;
See the details below.
This is an exercise on the sequential Futures
composition without error accumulation.
This exercise uses composition of both sync and async operations.
This is an exercise on the sequential Futures
composition with error accumulation.
This exercise uses a recursion although a non-recursive solution would be better.
This is an exercise on the concurrent Futures
composition without error accumulation.
This is just a straightforward use of Future.traverse.
These are exercises on the concurrent Futures
composition with error accumulation.