NAME

    Ryu - asynchronous stream building blocks

SYNOPSIS

     #!/usr/bin/env perl
     use strict;
     use warnings;
     use Ryu qw($ryu);
     my ($lines) =
            $ryu->from(\*STDIN)
                    ->by_line
                    ->filter(qr/\h/)
                    ->count
                    ->get;
     print "Had $lines line(s) containing whitespace\n";

DESCRIPTION

    Provides data flow processing for asynchronous coding purposes. It's a
    bit like ReactiveX <https://reactivex.io> in concept. Where possible,
    it tries to provide a similar API. It is not a directly-compatible
    implementation, however.

 Why would I be using this?

    Eventually some documentation pages might appear, but at the moment
    they're unlikely to exist.

      * Network protocol implementations - if you're bored of stringing
      together substr, pack, unpack and vec, try Ryu::Manual::Protocol

      * Extract, Transform, Load workflows (ETL) - need to pull data from
      somewhere, mangle it into shape, push it to a database? that'd be
      Ryu::Manual::ETL

      * Reactive event handling - Ryu::Manual::Reactive

    As an expert software developer with a keen eye for useful code, you
    may already be bored of this documentation and on the verge of reaching
    for alternatives. The "SEE ALSO" section may speed you on your way.

 Components

  Sources

    A source emits items. See Ryu::Source.

    Items can be any scalar value - some examples:

      * a single byte

      * a character

      * a byte string

      * a character string

      * an object instance

      * an arrayref or hashref

  Sinks

    A sink receives items. It's the counterpart to a source. See Ryu::Sink.

  Streams

    A stream is a thing with a source. See Ryu::Stream, which is likely to
    be something that does not yet exist.

 What does this module do?

    Nothing. It's just a top-level loader for pulling in all the other
    components.

 Some notes that might not relate to anything

    With a single parameter, "from" and "to" will use the given instance as
    a Ryu::Source or Ryu::Sink respectively.

    Multiple parameters are a shortcut for instantiating the given source
    or sink:

     my $stream = Ryu::Stream->from(
      file => 'somefile.bin'
     );

    is equivalent to

     my $stream = Ryu::Stream->from(
      Ryu::Source->new(
       file => 'somefile.bin'
      )
     );

Why the name?

      *  $ryu  lines up with typical 4-character indentation settings.

      * there's Rx for other languages, and this is based on the same ideas

      * 流 was too hard for me to type

 from

    Helper method which returns a Ryu::Source from a list of items.

 just

    Helper method which returns a single-item Ryu::Source.

SEE ALSO

 Other modules

    Some perl modules of relevance:

      * Future - fundamental building block for one-shot tasks

      * POE::Filter - venerable and battle-tested, but slightly short on
      features due to the focus on protocols

      * Data::Transform - standalone version of POE::Filter

      * List::Gen - list mangling features

      * HOP::Stream - based on the Higher Order Perl book

      * Flow - quite similar in concept to this module, maybe a bit short
      on documentation, doesn't provide integration with other sources such
      as files or IO::Async::Stream

      * Flux - more like the java8 streams API, sync-based

      * Message::Passing - on initial glance seemed more of a commandline
      tool, sadly based on AnyEvent

      * Rx.pl <https://github.com/eilara/Rx.pl> - a Perl version of the
      http://reactivex.io Reactive API

      * Perlude - combines features of the shell / UNIX streams and
      Haskell, pipeline syntax is "backwards" (same as grep/map chains in
      Perl)

      * IO::Pipeline

      * DS

      * Evo

      * Async::Stream - early release, but seems to be very similar in
      concept to Ryu::Source

      * Data::Monad

 Other references

    There are various documents, specifications and discussions relating to
    the concepts we use. Here's a few:

      * http://www.reactivemanifesto.org/

      * Java 8 streams API
      <https://docs.oracle.com/javase/8/docs/api/java/util/stream/package-summary.html>

      * C++ range-v3 <https://github.com/ericniebler/range-v3>

AUTHOR

    Tom Molesworth <TEAM@cpan.org>

LICENSE

    Copyright Tom Molesworth 2011-2019. Licensed under the same terms as
    Perl itself.