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09:23
@raspberry400 please see our room rules in terms of posting longer blocks of code off-site and also not asking questions that you have on main for at least 48 hours. Also please see the code formatting guide as this is illegible
 
2 hours later…
AAB
AAB
11:58
cbg
is realpython a good website?
I need to learn a bit about async python
any recommendation for sources?
IMO RealPython is certainly not one of the worst sources of information but it can miss the mark in some areas. I haven't found egregiously false info there in the past but I've not looked at it for quite a long time
 
2 hours later…
AAB
AAB
13:45
@roganjosh so far I understand in python async coroutines are just pushed into the event loop, The moment we do an await what ever is present in the event loop is executed but instead of waiting for the repsonse incase of database or rest calls we just move to the next item in the event loop
is this sort of correct understanding?
14:05
Yep
AAB
AAB
14:46
@Aran-Fey so event loop has 3 requests r1,r2,r3 I do an await r1,r2,r3 is executed the result for r3 comes first then r2 the event loop manages all this internally? say r2 causes an exception what happens to the results is exception handling any different than in python?
I see you have gather tasks async for async with and so on so do exceptins also need to be done differently?
Welp, now things are getting more complicated. When you say the loop has 3 "requests", I assume you mean asyncio.Tasks? Because the event loop only executes Tasks, nothing else
AAB
AAB
yes
When a task is completed, python saves the result (i.e. return value or exception). Nothing happens with the result unless you ask for it, for example by doing await task or task.result()
Exceptions aren't any different in async. Async is all about waiting for something to finish. Handling the exception happens afterwards, when it's already finished
AAB
AAB
ok
 
1 hour later…
AAB
AAB
16:02
async def main():
task1 = asyncio.create_task(
say_after(1, 'hello'))

task2 = asyncio.create_task(
say_after(2, 'world'))

print(f"started at {time.strftime('%X')}")

# Wait until both tasks are completed (should take
# around 2 seconds.)
await task1
await task2

print(f"finished at {time.strftime('%X')}")
the example from python docs, it shows that await coroutine is slower than a taks
So is it because the tasks are started concurrently whereas in case of coroutine only after the 1 st coroutine completes the next is executed?
@AAB FWIW I'm really not the person to ask about async. For python, it's just not in my wheelhouse
AAB
AAB
@roganjosh :P maybe will leave for @Aran-Fey
@AAB Correct
Indeed. I trust him way above me in this arena
AAB
AAB
dumb question but if its only 1 thread that does all the work what happens here
how does it start and execute both tasks?
also what is contextvars having hard time understanding is it like isolated data for each task
16:08
It pauses 1 task and executes another one in the meantime
Usually the OS is doing some work in the background, like receiving data on a socket or reading a file
AAB
AAB
okay so the illusion of parallelism, when it hits something like a sleep/blocking operation in the coroutine it just goes to the second one waiting for it to finish
 
5 hours later…
21:25
@AAB I've been linked here before - sopython.com/wiki/What_tutorial_should_I_read%3F

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