@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 #15203 · Oct 7
#python#agents#ai#framework#llm#openai#python The OpenAI Agents SDK is a Python framework that lets you easily build and connect AI agents—smart programs that can talk, use tools, and work together to solve tasks[2][3]. You can turn any Python function into a tool an agent can use, set up safety checks to control what agents do, and automatically pass tasks between different agents when needed[2][4]. The SDK manages conversation history for you, so agents remember past interactions, and it includes tools to track and debug how agents make decisions[2]. This makes it simple to create reliable, customizable AI helpers for things like customer support, research, or automation, with clear oversight and fast development. https://github.com/openai/openai-agents-python
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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.