@Dharman but they will look up the page about die if they don't understand it in the first place. Or it's just not the manual that works for them, which don't make it look into it in the first place.
@Dharman Your mileage may vary, an example is an example, don't put too much overthinking into it. Especially small examples can't take much, they fall apart then.
@ThW But if it's just a common failure there is no need for an exception. Exceptions I try to keep for the parts that are exceptional (don't know how good I am with that in the end)
Yeah, what happened to programming? I mean once upon a time this was just honestly called call-back. And even those little call-backs betrayed us from time to time.
So we felt cheated and we demanded for promises. Did it help?
@ThW I would say maybe using threads wrong, but I'm leaning myself far out of the windows here, as I actually have only very very remotely contact to programming with threads.
@PeeHaa Threaten the code. Threaten the system. And most importantly: Threaten the user.
@hakre With Non-Blocking-IO you hide the asynchronous part inside the loop events. The main loop is still synchronous. Basically with an event loop all the people line up to talk with your after each other while with threads directly they shout at you at the same time.
@hakre Use our byte-stream, socket, and file libraries for I/O. It abstracts most of the annoyances and edge cases and just gives you easy-to-use objects.
I/O failures generally result in throws from read()/write().
Depending on what you're doing, we probably have a library for that. :-P
For the most part you'll only touch the event loop for timers.