Where to Go From Here?
You can download the completed version of the project using the Download Materials button at the top or bottom of this tutorial.
You now know everything you need to start testing your RxSwift-based apps. You learned how RxBlocking is useful in testing terminating sequences or sequences in which you’re not interested in when elements were emitted, while RxTest provides extra flexibility and power suited mostly to testing operators and time-based streams.
And you even touched a bit on some lower-level concepts such as the basics of schedulers and how RxTest’s TestScheduler
calculates virtual time.
There is still more to explore in regards to both RxBlocking and RxTest — their internal workings, operators and more. The best place to continue with your studies will be the official RxSwift Unit Tests documentation, as well as RxBlocking’s operator list.
In the meantime, if you have any questions or comments about this tutorial or writing tests for your RxSwift code in general, please join the forum discussion below!
Thanks to Guy Magen for his awesome work designing this app and really making it shine. You can find some of his work at https://www.guymagen.com.