TGTGInsighttelegram intelligenceLIVE / telegram public index
← Linuxgram 🐧

TGINSIGHT SIMILAR POSTS

Sib kontenut simili

Kanal tas-sors @linuxgram · Post #18607 · Apr 28

📰 GTK2 Gets an Unofficial Revival Fork for Legacy Linux Apps A Devuan community developer has launched GTK2-NG, a fork designed to maintain compatibility for legacy GTK2 software on current Linux systems. 🔗 Source: https://linuxiac.com/gtk2-gets-an-unofficial-revival-fork-for-legacy-linux-apps/ #linux

Hashtags

Riżultati

3 postijiet simili nstabu

Tfittxija: #gevent

当前筛选 #gevent清除筛选
djangoproject

@djangoproject · Post #439 · 13/09/2017 03:57

Evented Django part one: Socket.IO and gevent #Socket.IO was developed with a #Node.JS server implementation, but work is being done to add server implementations to a variety of languages. Two such servers exist for Python, tornadio and #gevent-socketio. I'm a big fan of gevent, so I will use gevent-socketio, but tornadio looks well-written and very promising. http://codysoyland.com/2011/feb/6/evented-django-part-one-socketio-and-gevent/

djangoproject

@djangoproject · Post #170 · 22/09/2016 14:27

https://pypi.python.org/pypi/uvloop #uvloop is a fast, drop-in replacement of the built-in #asyncio event loop. uvloop is released under the MIT license. uvloop and asyncio, combined with the power of async/await in Python 3.5, makes it easier than ever to write high-performance #networking code in Python. uvloop makes asyncio fast. In fact, it is at least 2x faster than #nodejs, #gevent, as well as any other Python #asynchronous framework. The performance of uvloop-based asyncio is close to that of Go programs.

djangoproject

@djangoproject · Post #270 · 26/02/2017 08:08

https://www.obeythetestinggoat.com/testing-async-asyncio-and-performance.html #Testing, #async, #asyncio, and #performance Sun 27 December 2015 By Harry I recently did some experimenting with asyncio, and wanted to report back on how I got on with writing tests for it. While I was at it I was also able to compare its performance with a couple of other approaches to #mutlitasking in Python, namely #threads and #gevent, so I'll report on that here too. (tl;dr: it's much of a muchness).