// Copyright (c) Microsoft Open Technologies, Inc. All rights reserved. See License.txt in the project root for license information. namespace System.Reactive { /// /// The System.Reactive namespace contains interfaces and classes used throughout the Reactive Extensions library. /// [System.Runtime.CompilerServices.CompilerGeneratedAttribute] class NamespaceDoc { } } namespace System.Reactive.Concurrency { /// /// The System.Reactive.Concurrency namespace contains interfaces and classes that provide the scheduler infrastructure used by Reactive Extensions to construct and /// process event streams. Schedulers are used to parameterize the concurrency introduced by query operators, provide means to virtualize time, to process historical data, /// and to write unit tests for functionality built using Reactive Extensions constructs. /// [System.Runtime.CompilerServices.CompilerGeneratedAttribute] class NamespaceDoc { } } namespace System.Reactive.Disposables { /// /// The System.Reactive.Disposables namespace contains interfaces and classes that provide a compositional set of constructs used to deal with resource and subscription /// management in Reactive Extensions. Those types are used extensively within the implementation of Reactive Extensions and are useful when writing custom query operators or /// schedulers. /// [System.Runtime.CompilerServices.CompilerGeneratedAttribute] class NamespaceDoc { } } namespace System.Reactive.Linq { /// /// The System.Reactive.Linq namespace contains interfaces and classes that support expressing queries over observable sequences, using Language Integrated Query (LINQ). /// Query operators are made available as extension methods for IObservable<T> and IQbservable<T> defined on the Observable and Qbservable classes, respectively. /// [System.Runtime.CompilerServices.CompilerGeneratedAttribute] class NamespaceDoc { } } namespace System.Reactive.Subjects { /// /// The System.Reactive.Subjects namespace contains interfaces and classes to represent subjects, which are objects implementing both IObservable<T> and IObserver<T>. /// Subjects are often used as sources of events, allowing one party to raise events and allowing another party to write queries over the event stream. Because of their ability to /// have multiple registered observers, subjects are also used as a facility to provide multicast behavior for event streams in queries. /// [System.Runtime.CompilerServices.CompilerGeneratedAttribute] class NamespaceDoc { } }