@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.
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Source channel @githubtrending · Post #14859 · Jun 24
#typescript#cli#clustering#concurrency#dependency_injection#effect#error_handling#javascript#observability#opentelemetry#platform#schema#typescript#workflows Effect is a powerful TypeScript framework that helps you build reliable and complex applications by managing side effects like logging, network calls, and database operations in a safe and organized way. It uses a core `Effect` type to describe workflows that are lazy, composable, and type-safe, allowing you to handle errors and dependencies explicitly. The framework is modular, with many packages for AI, CLI tools, distributed computing, SQL databases, and more, making it flexible for various needs. Using Effect improves code quality, concurrency handling, and maintainability, helping you write robust TypeScript apps efficiently[1][2][4][5]. https://github.com/Effect-TS/effect
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@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.
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@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.