asyncio: another Future example using add_done_callback()

This commit is contained in:
Victor Stinner 2013-12-09 13:04:12 +01:00
parent 45c2fd9f8a
commit d8f11e9265
1 changed files with 34 additions and 2 deletions

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@ -409,8 +409,8 @@ Details:
* ``wait_task()`` stops the event loop when ``print_sum()`` is done.
Example: Future and get result
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Example: Future with run_until_complete()
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Example combining a :class:`Future` and a :ref:`coroutine <coroutine>`::
@ -432,3 +432,35 @@ The example waits for the completion of the future (which takes 1 second). The
coroutine is responsible of the computation. The event loop is notified when
the future is done (see the :meth:`Future.set_result` method).
Example: Future with run_until_complete()
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
The previous example can be written differently using the
:meth:`Future.add_done_callback` method::
import asyncio
@asyncio.coroutine
def slow_operation(future):
yield from asyncio.sleep(1)
future.set_result('Future in done!')
def exit(future):
print(future.result())
loop.stop()
loop = asyncio.get_event_loop()
future = asyncio.Future()
asyncio.Task(slow_operation(future))
future.add_done_callback(exit)
loop.run_forever()
loop.close()
The future is now responsible to display the result and stop the loop using the
``exit()`` callback.
.. note::
The coroutine is only executed when the event loop starts running, so it is
possible to add a "done callback" to the future after creating the task
scheduling the coroutine.