@djangoproject · Post #585 · 03/23/2018, 02:43 AM
https://www.fullstackpython.com/celery.html #Celery is a task #queue implementation for Python web applications used to #asynchronously execute work outside the HTTP request-response cycle.
Hashtags
TGINSIGHT SIMILAR POSTS
Source channel @githubtrending · Post #14729 · May 21
#csharp#c_sharp#linq#unity ZLinq is a high-performance, zero-allocation LINQ library for .NET and game engines like Unity and Godot. It improves on regular LINQ by avoiding memory allocations during method chaining, boosting speed and efficiency, especially in demanding apps like games. You use it by calling `AsValueEnumerable()` on collections, enabling faster queries with almost full compatibility with .NET 10 LINQ features. It supports advanced operations on arrays, spans, trees (like file systems and JSON), and SIMD for parallel processing. ZLinq also offers drop-in replacements to accelerate existing LINQ code without rewriting. This means you get faster, more memory-efficient data processing with minimal code changes[1][3][4]. https://github.com/Cysharp/ZLinq
Search: #asynchronously
@djangoproject · Post #585 · 03/23/2018, 02:43 AM
https://www.fullstackpython.com/celery.html #Celery is a task #queue implementation for Python web applications used to #asynchronously execute work outside the HTTP request-response cycle.
Hashtags
@djangoproject · Post #262 · 02/16/2017, 07:24 AM
http://masnun.com/2015/11/20/python-asyncio-future-task-and-the-event-loop.html On any platform, when we want to do something #asynchronously, it usually involves an #event loop. An event loop is a loop that can register #tasks to be executed, execute them, delay or even cancel them and handle different events related to these operations. Generally, we #schedule multiple async functions to the event loop. The loop runs one function, while that function waits for #IO, it pauses it and runs another. When the first function completes IO, it is resumed. Thus two or more functions can #co_operatively run together. This the main goal of an event loop.