Use f-strings in asyncio-task code examples (GH-10035)
Replace str.format with f-strings in the code examples of asyncio-task documentation.
This commit is contained in:
parent
057f4078b0
commit
9f43fbbd9d
|
@ -57,12 +57,12 @@ To actually run a coroutine asyncio provides three main mechanisms:
|
|||
print(what)
|
||||
|
||||
async def main():
|
||||
print('started at', time.strftime('%X'))
|
||||
print(f"started at {time.strftime('%X')}")
|
||||
|
||||
await say_after(1, 'hello')
|
||||
await say_after(2, 'world')
|
||||
|
||||
print('finished at', time.strftime('%X'))
|
||||
print(f"finished at {time.strftime('%X')}")
|
||||
|
||||
asyncio.run(main())
|
||||
|
||||
|
@ -86,14 +86,14 @@ To actually run a coroutine asyncio provides three main mechanisms:
|
|||
task2 = asyncio.create_task(
|
||||
say_after(2, 'world'))
|
||||
|
||||
print('started at', time.strftime('%X'))
|
||||
print(f"started at {time.strftime('%X')}")
|
||||
|
||||
# Wait until both tasks are completed (should take
|
||||
# around 2 seconds.)
|
||||
await task1
|
||||
await task2
|
||||
|
||||
print('finished at', time.strftime('%X'))
|
||||
print(f"finished at {time.strftime('%X')}")
|
||||
|
||||
Note that expected output now shows that the snippet runs
|
||||
1 second faster than before::
|
||||
|
@ -603,9 +603,9 @@ Scheduling From Other Threads
|
|||
print('The coroutine took too long, cancelling the task...')
|
||||
future.cancel()
|
||||
except Exception as exc:
|
||||
print('The coroutine raised an exception: {!r}'.format(exc))
|
||||
print(f'The coroutine raised an exception: {exc!r}')
|
||||
else:
|
||||
print('The coroutine returned: {!r}'.format(result))
|
||||
print(f'The coroutine returned: {result!r}')
|
||||
|
||||
See the :ref:`concurrency and multithreading <asyncio-multithreading>`
|
||||
section of the documentation.
|
||||
|
|
Loading…
Reference in New Issue