Old-reactive
Abstract
Reactive is a simple foundation for programming reactive systems functionally. Like Fran/FRP, it has a notions of (reactive) behaviors and events. Like DataDriven, Reactive has a data-driven implementation. The main difference between Reactive and DataDriven are
- Reactive builds on STM-based IVars, while DataDriven builds on continuation-based computations; and
- The algebra of Events and reactive values (called "sources" in DataDriven) are purely functional. I couldn't figure out how to accomplish that in DataDriven.
The inspiration for Reactive was Mike Sperber's [Lula] implementation of FRP. Mike used blocking threads, which I had never considered for FRP. While playing with the idea, I realized that I could give a very elegant and efficient solution to caching, which DataDriven doesn't do. (For an application f <*> a
of a varying function to a varying argument, caching remembers the latest function to apply to a new argument and the last argument to which to apply a new function.)
As with DataDriven, Reactive provides instances for Monoid, Functor, Applicative, and Monad.
Besides this wiki page, here are more ways to find out about Reactive:
- Read the Haddock docs.
- Get the code repository: darcs get http://darcs.haskell.org/packages/reactive.
- Install from Hackage (coming).
- See the version history.
Please leave comments at the Talk page.