On 23 July 2016 at 16:06, Ian Kelly wrote:
> On Fri, Jul 22, 2016 at 6:27 PM, Marco S. via Python-list
> wrote:
>> Furthermore I have a question about exceptions in asyncio. If I
>> understand well how it works, tasks exceptions can be caught only if
>> you wait for task completion, with yield fr
On Fri, Jul 22, 2016 at 6:27 PM, Marco S. via Python-list
wrote:
> Furthermore I have a question about exceptions in asyncio. If I
> understand well how it works, tasks exceptions can be caught only if
> you wait for task completion, with yield from, await or
> loop.run_until_complete(future). But
On 7/22/2016 8:27 PM, Marco S. via Python-list wrote:
I'm developing a web app based on aiohttp, and I find the event loop
concept very interesting. I never programmed with it before, but I
know that node.js and GUIs are based on it.
What I can't understand is how asyncio make it possible to run
I'm developing a web app based on aiohttp, and I find the event loop
concept very interesting. I never programmed with it before, but I
know that node.js and GUIs are based on it.
What I can't understand is how asyncio make it possible to run
multiple tasks concurrently, since it's single threaded