On Sat, 2003-12-13 at 07:35, Oren Tirosh wrote: > Some people think that "threads suck" while others swear by them. > The Python language supports both the threaded and event-driven I/O > programming styles and generally avoids taking sides on programming > style holy wars. I guess it depends on what you are trying to do. I do a lot of "low-level" programming in Python (lots of system calls, signals, pipes, etc.) and sometimes I feel like Python is not well suited for that... But I suppose if one were writing some data processing or GUI-style application then threads would be more appropriate. > Some people think that "signals suck" while others use them happily. > Our BDFL happens to be on the "signals suck" camp and *is* taking a > side by refusing EINTR retry loops around Python's I/O calls. It appears so. 8-) > The signal module has been reluctantly accepted into Python but if you > want to actually use it you are on your own - don't use the builtin > file object and implement all I/O calls yourself with the os module so > you can retry on EINTR. Yep, I have practically done that. I have a large number of "forked" modules that utilize the async I/O model. I was thinking it would be cool to get that part of the standard library. Now I see that might not be possible. > Personally, I can't see what harm could come from making Python I/O > EINTR-safe but Guido made it clear that such patches will not be > accepted. Good luck. Yep, thanks. -- -- ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Keith Dart <mailto:kdart at kdart.com> <http://www.kdart.com/> ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Public key ID: B08B9D2C Public key: <http://www.kdart.com/~kdart/public.key> ============================================================================ -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: not available Type: application/pgp-signature Size: 189 bytes Desc: This is a digitally signed message part Url : http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/attachments/20031213/9b7e966b/attachment.bin
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