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Source channel @githubtrending · Post #14858 · Jun 23

#other#ai#bolt#copilot#cursor#cursorai#devin#devinai#github_copilot#lovable#open_source#replit#system_prompts#trae#trae_ai#trae_ide#v0#vscode#windsurf#windsurf_ai You can access a huge collection of over 7000 lines of official system prompts and internal tools from many AI models and agents like v0, Manus, Cursor, Replit Agent, and more. These prompts guide AI to work better by giving clear instructions, which helps the AI give more accurate and useful answers. Using these prompts can save you time, improve AI performance, and make your interactions with AI smoother and more productive. Plus, there’s a free AI security audit service to help protect your AI systems from leaks and hacks, keeping your data safe. Supporting this project helps keep these valuable resources updated. https://github.com/x1xhlol/system-prompts-and-models-of-ai-tools

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djangoproject

@djangoproject · Post #157 · 09/06/2016, 07:55 PM

https://docs.python.org/2/library/multiprocessing.html #multiprocessing is a package that supports spawning processes using an #API similar to the #threading module. The multiprocessing package offers both local and remote #concurrency, effectively side-stepping the Global Interpreter Lock by using subprocesses instead of #threads. Due to this, the multiprocessing module allows the programmer to fully leverage multiple processors on a given machine. It runs on both Unix and Windows.

djangoproject

@djangoproject · Post #118 · 08/08/2016, 11:44 AM

https://docs.python.org/3/library/multiprocessing.html multiprocessing is a package that supports spawning processes using an API similar to the threading module. The multiprocessing package offers both local and remote concurrency, effectively side-stepping the Global Interpreter Lock by using subprocesses instead of threads. Due to this, the multiprocessing module allows the programmer to fully leverage multiple processors on a given machine. It runs on both Unix and Windows. The #multiprocessing module also introduces #APIs which do not have analogs in the #threading#module. A prime example of this is the Pool object which offers a convenient means of parallelizing the execution of a function across multiple input values, distributing the input data across processes (data #parallelism). The following example demonstrates the common practice of defining such functions in a module so that child processes can successfully import that module. This basic example of data parallelism using Pool,

djangoproject

@djangoproject · Post #107 · 08/02/2016, 03:22 PM

https://github.com/python/asyncio The #asyncio#module provides infrastructure for writing #single-threaded concurrent code using #coroutines, #multiplexing#I/O access over sockets and other resources, running network clients and servers, and other related primitives. Here is a more detailed list of the package contents: a pluggable event loop with various system-specific implementations; transport and protocol abstractions (similar to those in Twisted); concrete support for TCP, UDP, SSL, subprocess pipes, delayed calls, and others (some may be system-dependent); a Future class that mimics the one in the concurrent.futures module, but adapted for use with the event loop; #coroutines and #tasks based on yield from (PEP 380), to help write concurrent code in a sequential fashion; cancellation support for Futures and coroutines; synchronization primitives for use between coroutines in a single thread, mimicking those in the #threading module; an interface for passing work off to a threadpool, for times when you absolutely, positively have to use a library that makes blocking I/O calls. Note: The implementation of asyncio was previously called "Tulip".