This snapshot establishes the camera-to-result recognition flow and related tests while checking in the project skill/docs assets required for the configured local tooling.
643 lines
23 KiB
Markdown
643 lines
23 KiB
Markdown
---
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name: axiom-combine-patterns
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description: Use when working with Combine publishers, AnyCancellable lifecycle, @Published properties, or bridging Combine with async/await. Covers reactive patterns, operator selection, memory management, and migration strategy.
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license: MIT
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metadata:
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version: "1.0.0"
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last-updated: "2026-03-12"
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---
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# Combine Patterns
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## Overview
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Combine remains embedded in massive production codebases — UIKit delegates, NotificationCenter bridging, KVO observation, and @Published properties are everywhere. New code prefers async/await, but interop and maintenance of existing Combine pipelines is daily work. This skill covers the decisions and pitfalls that matter: when to use Combine vs async/await, how to avoid memory leaks, and how to bridge between the two paradigms.
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**Core principle**: Combine is not dead — it's mature. The question isn't "should I use Combine?" but "is Combine the right tool for THIS specific data flow?"
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## When to Use This Skill
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- Working with existing Combine pipelines
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- Deciding between Combine and async/await for a new data flow
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- Debugging AnyCancellable memory leaks or silent pipeline failures
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- Using @Published or ObservableObject
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- Bridging Combine publishers with async/await code
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- Working with Subjects (PassthroughSubject, CurrentValueSubject)
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## When NOT to Use This Skill
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- Timer.publish patterns → route via `axiom-ios-concurrency` to timer-patterns skill (dedicated timer lifecycle coverage)
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- @Observable migration from ObservableObject → use `axiom-swift-concurrency` (modern observation)
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- UIKit ↔ SwiftUI bridging → route via `axiom-ios-ui` (view wrapping, not data flow)
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- General async/await patterns → use `axiom-swift-concurrency`
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## Example Prompts
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- "Should I use Combine or async/await for this?"
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- "My Combine pipeline silently stops producing values"
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- "How do I convert a publisher to an async sequence?"
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- "AnyCancellable is leaking — where do I store it?"
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- "What's the difference between combineLatest and zip?"
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- "How do I debounce a text field with Combine?"
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- "My @Published property update isn't reaching the view"
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- "How do I bridge a Combine publisher into async/await code?"
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---
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## Part 1: Combine vs async/await Decision Tree
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| Use Case | Combine | async/await | Why |
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|----------|---------|-------------|-----|
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| One-shot network call | No | Yes | async/await is simpler, no cancellable management |
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| Stream of values over time | Yes | AsyncStream | Combine's operators (debounce, combineLatest) are richer |
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| Debounce/throttle user input | Yes | Awkward | Combine has built-in debounce/throttle; AsyncStream requires manual implementation |
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| Merge multiple sources | Yes | TaskGroup | Combine's merge/combineLatest handle heterogeneous streams naturally |
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| Existing UIKit KVO/Notification | Yes | Bridge | publisher(for:) and NotificationCenter.default.publisher are idiomatic Combine |
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| New project iOS 17+ | No | Yes | @Observable + async/await is the modern pattern |
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| Existing codebase with Combine | Maintain | Migrate incrementally | Don't rewrite working pipelines — bridge at boundaries |
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### Quick Decision
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```
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Is it a one-shot operation (network call, file read)?
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├─ Yes → async/await (simpler, no cancellable management)
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│
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Does it need time-based operators (debounce, throttle, delay)?
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├─ Yes → Combine (built-in operators, no manual implementation)
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│
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Are you combining multiple ongoing streams?
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├─ Yes → Combine (combineLatest, merge, zip are purpose-built)
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│
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Is this new code on iOS 17+?
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├─ Yes → async/await + @Observable (modern pattern)
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│
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Is it existing Combine code that works?
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└─ Yes → Keep it. Bridge at boundaries when async/await code needs the data.
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```
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---
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## Part 2: Publisher/Subscriber Lifecycle
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### AnyCancellable Storage Rules
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AnyCancellable cancels its subscription when deallocated. If you don't store it, the pipeline is cancelled immediately after setup.
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#### ❌ Pipeline dies instantly
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```swift
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func setupPipeline() {
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publisher
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.sink { value in
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self.handle(value) // Never called
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}
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// AnyCancellable returned by sink is discarded → subscription cancelled
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}
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```
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#### ✅ Store in Set<AnyCancellable>
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```swift
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private var cancellables = Set<AnyCancellable>()
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func setupPipeline() {
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publisher
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.sink { [weak self] value in
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self?.handle(value)
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}
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.store(in: &cancellables)
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}
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```
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### Why Set, Not Array
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`Set<AnyCancellable>` is the idiomatic choice because:
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- `store(in:)` works with both `Set` and `RangeReplaceableCollection` (including `Array`), but `Set` is conventional
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- Order doesn't matter for subscriptions
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- Prevents accidental duplicates if setup runs twice
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### 4 Memory Leak Patterns
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#### Leak 1: Strong self in sink
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```swift
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// ❌ LEAK: sink closure captures self strongly
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publisher
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.sink { value in
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self.handle(value) // Strong capture → retain cycle
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}
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.store(in: &cancellables)
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// ✅ FIX: weak self
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publisher
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.sink { [weak self] value in
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self?.handle(value)
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}
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.store(in: &cancellables)
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```
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#### Leak 2: Missing store(in:)
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```swift
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// ❌ LEAK: cancellable assigned to local var, not stored
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let cancellable = publisher.sink { handle($0) }
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// cancellable deallocated at end of scope → pipeline cancelled
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// ✅ FIX: store in instance property
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publisher.sink { [weak self] in self?.handle($0) }
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.store(in: &cancellables)
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```
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#### Leak 3: Over-retained cancellables
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```swift
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// ❌ LEAK: cancellables set never cleared, old pipelines accumulate
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func refreshData() {
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// Each call adds another subscription without removing the previous one
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dataPublisher
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.sink { [weak self] in self?.update($0) }
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.store(in: &cancellables)
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}
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// ✅ FIX: clear before re-subscribing
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func refreshData() {
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cancellables.removeAll() // Cancel previous subscriptions
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dataPublisher
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.sink { [weak self] in self?.update($0) }
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.store(in: &cancellables)
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}
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```
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#### Leak 4: assign(to:on:) strong capture
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`assign(to:on:)` captures the `on:` parameter **strongly**. When the target is `self`, you get a retain cycle: `self → cancellables → subscription → self`.
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```swift
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// ❌ LEAK: assign(to:on:) retains self strongly — deinit never called
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userPublisher
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.map { $0.name }
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.assign(to: \.displayName, on: self)
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.store(in: &cancellables)
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// ✅ FIX: use assign(to:) with @Published projected value (iOS 14+)
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userPublisher
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.map { $0.name }
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.assign(to: &$displayName)
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// No store(in:) needed — subscription tied to @Published property lifetime
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```
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Key difference: `assign(to: &$prop)` does NOT return an `AnyCancellable` — the subscription is managed internally and cancelled when the `@Published` property's owner deallocates. No retain cycle, no cancellable storage needed.
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If you must support iOS 13, use `sink` with `[weak self]` instead.
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---
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## Part 3: Essential Operators
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One canonical example per group. These cover 90% of real-world usage.
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### Transform
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```swift
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// map: transform each value
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publisher.map { $0.name }
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// compactMap: transform + filter nil
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publisher.compactMap { Int($0) }
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// flatMap: one-to-many (each value produces a new publisher)
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searchText
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.flatMap { query in
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api.search(query) // Returns a publisher
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}
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```
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**flatMap gotcha**: Without `.switchToLatest()` or `maxPublishers: .max(1)`, flatMap creates a new inner publisher for every upstream value. For search-as-you-type, use `map` + `switchToLatest` instead:
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```swift
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searchText
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.map { query in api.search(query) }
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.switchToLatest() // Cancels previous search when new query arrives
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```
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### Combine Multiple Sources
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```swift
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// combineLatest: latest value from each, fires when ANY changes
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Publishers.CombineLatest(namePublisher, agePublisher)
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.map { name, age in "\(name), \(age)" }
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// merge: interleave values from same-type publishers
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Publishers.Merge(localUpdates, remoteUpdates)
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.sink { update in handle(update) }
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// zip: pairs values 1:1 (waits for both to produce)
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Publishers.Zip(requestA, requestB)
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.sink { responseA, responseB in /* both complete */ }
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```
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| Operator | Fires When | Use Case |
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|----------|-----------|----------|
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| combineLatest | Any input changes | Form validation (all fields) |
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| merge | Any input produces | Combining event streams |
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| zip | All inputs produce one value | Parallel requests that must complete together |
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### Time-Based
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```swift
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// debounce: wait until values stop arriving (search-as-you-type)
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searchTextPublisher
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.debounce(for: .milliseconds(300), scheduler: RunLoop.main)
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.sink { [weak self] query in self?.search(query) }
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.store(in: &cancellables)
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// throttle: emit at most once per interval (scroll position)
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scrollOffsetPublisher
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.throttle(for: .milliseconds(100), scheduler: RunLoop.main, latest: true)
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.sink { [weak self] offset in self?.updateHeader(offset) }
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.store(in: &cancellables)
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```
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| Operator | Behavior | Use Case |
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|----------|----------|----------|
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| debounce | Waits for silence, then emits last value | Search fields, auto-save |
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| throttle(latest: true) | Emits latest value at fixed intervals | Scroll tracking, sensor data |
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| throttle(latest: false) | Emits first value at fixed intervals | Rate-limiting button taps |
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### Error Handling
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```swift
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// tryMap: transform that can throw
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publisher.tryMap { data in
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try JSONDecoder().decode(Model.self, from: data)
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}
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// mapError: convert error types
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publisher.mapError { error in
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AppError.network(error)
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}
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// replaceError: provide fallback value (terminates error path)
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publisher.replaceError(with: defaultValue)
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// retry: re-subscribe on failure
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publisher.retry(3) // Retry up to 3 times before propagating error
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```
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**Error handling order matters**: `retry` should come before `replaceError`. Retry re-subscribes to the upstream publisher; replaceError terminates the error and makes the pipeline infallible.
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```swift
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api.fetchData()
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.retry(3) // Try 3 more times on failure
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.replaceError(with: cached) // If all retries fail, use cache
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.sink { data in update(data) }
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.store(in: &cancellables)
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```
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**replaceError after flatMap kills the outer pipeline**: If `replaceError` is downstream of `flatMap`, a single inner publisher error terminates the entire pipeline — not just that one request. Move error handling inside `flatMap` so each inner publisher handles its own errors:
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```swift
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// ❌ One API error kills the entire pipeline
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$searchText
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.flatMap { query in api.search(query) }
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.replaceError(with: []) // Pipeline completes on first error
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.sink { ... }
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// ✅ Each search handles its own errors independently
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$searchText
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.flatMap { query in
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api.search(query)
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.replaceError(with: []) // Only this search affected
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}
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.sink { ... }
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```
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---
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## Part 4: @Published + ObservableObject
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### willSet Timing
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`@Published` fires its publisher in `willSet`, not `didSet`. This means subscribers see the new value before the property has actually been set on the object.
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```swift
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class ViewModel: ObservableObject {
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@Published var count = 0
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init() {
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$count.sink { newValue in
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// 'newValue' is the incoming value
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// BUT self.count is still the OLD value here
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print("New: \(newValue), Current: \(self.count)")
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// Prints "New: 1, Current: 0" when count is set to 1
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}
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.store(in: &cancellables)
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}
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}
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```
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If you need to read the property's value after it's been set, don't subscribe to `$count` — use a `didSet` observer instead, or read `self.count` after a brief deferral. The `$` publisher is designed for reacting to the incoming value, not for reading post-mutation state.
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### Nested ObservableObject Trap
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SwiftUI does NOT observe nested ObservableObject changes. Only the top-level object's `objectWillChange` triggers view updates.
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```swift
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// ❌ View won't update when settings.theme changes
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class AppState: ObservableObject {
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@Published var settings = Settings() // Settings is also ObservableObject
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}
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class Settings: ObservableObject {
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@Published var theme = "light" // Changes here don't propagate
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}
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// ✅ FIX: Forward objectWillChange manually
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class AppState: ObservableObject {
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@Published var settings = Settings()
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private var cancellables = Set<AnyCancellable>()
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init() {
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settings.objectWillChange
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.sink { [weak self] _ in
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self?.objectWillChange.send()
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}
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.store(in: &cancellables)
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}
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}
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```
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**Better fix for iOS 17+**: Migrate to `@Observable`, which handles nested observation automatically. See `axiom-swift-concurrency` for migration patterns.
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### Thread Safety Warning
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`@Published` is NOT thread-safe. Setting a `@Published` property from a background thread triggers `objectWillChange` off the main thread, which can crash SwiftUI views.
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```swift
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// ❌ CRASH: @Published set from background thread
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class ViewModel: ObservableObject {
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@Published var data: [Item] = []
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func fetch() {
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Task {
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let items = await api.fetchItems()
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data = items // Background thread → crash
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}
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}
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}
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// ✅ FIX: Ensure main thread
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@MainActor
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class ViewModel: ObservableObject {
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@Published var data: [Item] = []
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func fetch() {
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Task {
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let items = await api.fetchItems()
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data = items // Safe — @MainActor ensures main thread
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}
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}
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}
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```
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---
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## Part 5: Bridging Combine and async/await
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### Publisher → AsyncSequence
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Use `.values` to consume any publisher as an async sequence:
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```swift
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let cancellable = notificationPublisher
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.sink { notification in handle(notification) }
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// ✅ Modern equivalent using .values
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for await notification in notificationPublisher.values {
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handle(notification)
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}
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```
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**Caveats with `.values`**:
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- The `for await` loop runs indefinitely until the publisher completes or the Task is cancelled
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- Errors thrown by the publisher terminate the loop
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- Only one consumer — if two `for await` loops consume the same `.values`, behavior is undefined
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### async/await → Publisher
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Wrap an async function in `Future` for Combine consumption:
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```swift
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func fetchUser(id: String) async throws -> User { ... }
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// Wrap as a Combine publisher
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let userPublisher = Future<User, Error> { promise in
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Task {
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do {
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let user = try await fetchUser(id: "123")
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promise(.success(user))
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} catch {
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promise(.failure(error))
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}
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}
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}
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```
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**Future executes immediately** — it runs its closure when created, not when subscribed. Wrap in `Deferred` if you need lazy execution:
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```swift
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let lazyPublisher = Deferred {
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Future<User, Error> { promise in
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Task {
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do {
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let user = try await fetchUser(id: "123")
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promise(.success(user))
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} catch {
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promise(.failure(error))
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}
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}
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}
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}
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```
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### Gradual Migration Strategy
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Don't rewrite working Combine code. Bridge at the boundary:
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```
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Combine pipeline → .values → async/await code
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(bridge)
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async function → Future → Combine pipeline
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(bridge)
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```
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**Migration priority**:
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1. New code: write in async/await
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2. Boundary: bridge with `.values` or `Future`
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3. Existing Combine: leave working pipelines alone
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4. Rewrite: only when the pipeline needs significant changes anyway
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---
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## Part 6: Subjects
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### PassthroughSubject vs CurrentValueSubject
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| Feature | PassthroughSubject | CurrentValueSubject |
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|---------|-------------------|-------------------|
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| Initial value | None | Required |
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| Late subscribers | Miss previous values | Get current value immediately |
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| `.value` property | No | Yes (read current value) |
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| Use case | Events (button taps, notifications) | State (current selection, loading status) |
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```swift
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// Event-driven: no initial value, late subscribers miss past events
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let taps = PassthroughSubject<Void, Never>()
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taps.send()
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// State-driven: always has a current value
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let isLoading = CurrentValueSubject<Bool, Never>(false)
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isLoading.value = true // Direct access
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isLoading.send(false) // Also works
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```
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### Send-After-Completion Pitfall
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Once a Subject receives a completion event, all subsequent `send()` calls are silently ignored. No crash, no error — just silence.
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```swift
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let subject = PassthroughSubject<Int, Never>()
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subject.send(1) // Delivered
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subject.send(completion: .finished)
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subject.send(2) // Silently ignored — no crash, no warning
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// This is the most common cause of "my pipeline stopped working"
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```
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**Diagnosis**: If a pipeline silently stops producing values, check whether anything upstream sent a `.finished` or `.failure` completion. Once complete, the pipeline is dead.
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---
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## Part 7: Cold vs Hot Publishers (share/multicast)
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Most Combine publishers are **cold** — they start work when subscribed and each subscriber gets its own independent execution. `URLSession.dataTaskPublisher` fires a new HTTP request per subscriber.
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```swift
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// ❌ Two subscribers = two network requests
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let publisher = URLSession.shared
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.dataTaskPublisher(for: url)
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.map(\.data)
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.eraseToAnyPublisher()
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publisher.sink { cache.store($0) }.store(in: &cancellables) // Request 1
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publisher.sink { display($0) }.store(in: &cancellables) // Request 2
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
### share()
|
|
|
|
`.share()` makes a cold publisher hot — the first subscriber triggers the work, subsequent subscribers share the output:
|
|
|
|
```swift
|
|
// ✅ One request, shared result
|
|
let publisher = URLSession.shared
|
|
.dataTaskPublisher(for: url)
|
|
.map(\.data)
|
|
.share()
|
|
.eraseToAnyPublisher()
|
|
|
|
publisher.sink { cache.store($0) }.store(in: &cancellables) // Triggers request
|
|
publisher.sink { display($0) }.store(in: &cancellables) // Shares result
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
### share() Gotchas
|
|
|
|
| Gotcha | Effect | Fix |
|
|
|--------|--------|-----|
|
|
| Late subscribers miss values | `share()` uses PassthroughSubject — no replay | Attach all subscribers before the first value arrives, or use `multicast` with `CurrentValueSubject` |
|
|
| Upstream completed before subscriber attaches | Late subscriber immediately gets `.finished` with no values | Ensure subscription order, or cache the result outside Combine |
|
|
| All subscribers cancel → upstream cancels | New subscriber after that triggers a NEW upstream execution | Expected behavior, but surprising if you assumed the result was cached |
|
|
|
|
### When to use share()
|
|
|
|
```
|
|
Multiple subscribers to the same expensive publisher?
|
|
├─ No → Don't use share() (unnecessary complexity)
|
|
│
|
|
├─ Yes, all subscribe at the same time?
|
|
│ └─ Yes → share() works
|
|
│
|
|
└─ Yes, subscribers attach at different times?
|
|
└─ Use multicast(subject:) with CurrentValueSubject, or cache the result in a property
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
## Anti-Rationalization
|
|
|
|
| Thought | Reality |
|
|
|---------|---------|
|
|
| "Combine is dead, just use async/await" | Combine has no deprecation notice. Thousands of production apps use it. Rewriting working pipelines wastes time and introduces bugs. Bridge incrementally instead. |
|
|
| "I'll just use .sink everywhere" | Without `[weak self]` and proper `store(in:)`, every sink is a potential memory leak. The lifecycle rules in Part 2 prevent the top 4 leak patterns. |
|
|
| "assign(to:on:) is fine, it's the standard API" | It captures `on:` strongly — retain cycle if target is `self`. Use `assign(to: &$prop)` instead (Part 2, Leak 4). |
|
|
| "debounce and throttle are the same thing" | debounce waits for silence; throttle emits at intervals. Using the wrong one causes either delayed responses or missed events. Part 3 has the decision table. |
|
|
| "I know how @Published works" | @Published fires on willSet, not didSet. Nested ObservableObject doesn't propagate. Background thread access crashes. Part 4 covers all three traps. |
|
|
| "I'll migrate everything to async/await at once" | Full rewrites of working Combine code introduce bugs and waste time. Bridge at boundaries (Part 5). Rewrite only when the pipeline needs significant changes anyway. |
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
## Pressure Scenarios
|
|
|
|
### Scenario 1: "Let's migrate all Combine code to async/await"
|
|
|
|
**Setup**: Tech lead wants to modernize the codebase. "Combine is legacy, let's rip it out."
|
|
|
|
**Pressure**: Authority + scope creep. The entire data layer uses Combine publishers, @Published properties, and operator chains.
|
|
|
|
**Expected with skill**: Push back with the gradual migration strategy (Part 5). New code uses async/await. Boundaries use `.values` and `Future`. Existing working pipelines stay until they need changes. Full rewrite is the most expensive option with the least benefit.
|
|
|
|
**Pushback template**: "Combine isn't deprecated — Apple still ships it in every SDK. A full rewrite of working pipelines introduces bugs we don't have today. Let's bridge at boundaries: new code in async/await, `.values` to consume existing publishers, and we only rewrite a pipeline when we're already changing it significantly."
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
### Scenario 2: "Pipeline silently stopped — just recreate it"
|
|
|
|
**Setup**: A Combine pipeline stopped producing values after a refactor. No crash, no error.
|
|
|
|
**Pressure**: Time pressure. "Just tear it down and rebuild."
|
|
|
|
**Expected with skill**: Diagnose before rebuilding. Check: (1) Was a completion sent upstream? (send-after-completion, Part 6). (2) Is the AnyCancellable still alive? (storage rules, Part 2). (3) Did the publisher error without handling? (replaceError / catch, Part 3). These three causes cover 90% of silent pipeline failures.
|
|
|
|
**Diagnostic checklist**:
|
|
1. Is the `AnyCancellable` still stored? (Set not cleared, not deallocated)
|
|
2. Did anything upstream send `.finished` or `.failure`?
|
|
3. Is there a `tryMap` or other throwing operator without error handling?
|
|
4. Was `switchToLatest` used where the outer publisher completed?
|
|
|
|
**Pushback template**: "Before rebuilding, let me check four things: cancellable lifecycle, upstream completions, unhandled errors, and switchToLatest completion. One of these is almost always the cause. It takes 5 minutes to diagnose vs 30 minutes to rebuild and test."
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
### Scenario 3: "Settings changes aren't updating the UI"
|
|
|
|
**Setup**: A settings screen uses a nested ObservableObject. The parent `AppState` holds a `Settings` object. When the user changes `settings.theme`, the UI doesn't update.
|
|
|
|
**Pressure**: "The binding works in isolation, it must be a SwiftUI bug. Let me just force a refresh with objectWillChange.send()."
|
|
|
|
**Expected with skill**: Recognize the nested ObservableObject trap (Part 4). SwiftUI does NOT observe nested ObservableObject changes — only the top-level object's `objectWillChange` triggers view updates. The fix is either forwarding `objectWillChange` from the nested object, or migrating to `@Observable` (iOS 17+) which handles nesting automatically.
|
|
|
|
**Anti-pattern without skill**: Sprinkling `objectWillChange.send()` calls throughout the code, adding `@Published` to every nested property (which doesn't help), or restructuring the model to flatten everything into one object (losing separation of concerns).
|
|
|
|
**Pushback template**: "SwiftUI only observes the top-level ObservableObject. Nested objects need their objectWillChange forwarded to the parent. Part 4 has the exact pattern — it's a 5-line fix in the parent's init, not a SwiftUI bug."
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
## Resources
|
|
|
|
**WWDC**: 2019-722, 2019-721, 2020-10034
|
|
|
|
**Docs**: /combine, /combine/anycancellable, /combine/published
|
|
|
|
**Skills**: swift-concurrency, memory-debugging
|