There are 1 repository under publisher-subscriber-pattern topic.
Monad, Functional Programming features for Golang
Monad/MonadIO, Handler, Coroutine/doNotation, Functional Programming features for Rust
Functional Programming for EcmaScript(Javascript)
A highly extensible Rust-based meta-framework designed for building decoupled and maintainable applications.
Simple examples of object oriented design.
Alamofire API Request by Combine framework
AOS Project A.Y. 2021-2022
Small events emitters and subscribe, observable and reactive objects library
Event-driven Angular communication
Implementation of Publisher Subscriber message passing pattern and Master-Slave replication pattern.
This repository focuses mainly on the design patterns and their examples in Javascript
Alamofire API Request by Combine framework
A simplified implementation to learn how to build our own pubsub (publisher-subscriber pattern)
A C++ Publish/Subscriber Library
Project for Distributed Systems. Streaming service for listening music. the system was created on logic of Publisher-Consumer
The application allows users to retrieve tailored travel advice based on current and predicted conditions. Users interact via the REST API, providing parameters like location or travel preferences, receiving customized travel suggestions in return.
An example project showcasing a publisher-subscriber pattern implemented in Node.js using RabbitMQ for asynchronous messaging. This project provides a basic demonstration of how to send and receive messages between components in a distributed system.
Experience seamless real-time communication between users with RabbitMQ. This repository provides an intuitive example of a chat application using RabbitMQ's publisher-subscriber pattern. Start Docker, clone the repo, and execute the Node.js scripts to initiate effortless real-time messaging.
Publisher-subscriber-IPC
Simple pub/sub service
Distributed queue implementation for Assignment 1
This repository contains a simple demo of Google Pub/Sub.
Software architecture that allows multiple components or services to communicate with each other in an asynchronous manner. A publisher sends data or messages to a message broker or a middleware component, which then distributes the data or messages to subscribers.
Forkify is a recipe application built with pure JavaScript. It allows users to load recipe from API, search for recipes, view recipe details, add recipes to their bookmarks, and store them in local storage.
A recipe app where we can search, upload and bookmark recipes. Skills explored: OOJS, Advanced DOM, Async JS, AJAX, APIs, Sass, Parcel, MVC Architecture etc.
This project is a simple MQTT-like PubSub message broker that uses ANS-DPDK to bypass the Linux kernel network stack in order to achieve lower latency and higher throughput.
This tutorial demonstrates a simple publisher-consumer pattern using RabbitMQ as a message broker. We'll use Node.js and Docker Compose to set up the project easily and manage dependencies.
tiny http in kokoro, as a plugin
Forkify // Search for recipes 🍽😋👩🍳
Publish–subscribe is a sibling of the message queue paradigm, and is typically one part of a larger message-oriented middleware system. Most messaging systems support both the pub/sub and message queue models in their API