In python 3.5.1 one can make use of await/async, however, to use it (as I undestand), you need to have awaitable object. An awaitable object is an obje
I guess there is still no answer because the question is not pretty clear. You correctly said that
An awaitable object is an object that defines
__await__()
method returning an iterator
Not much to add here. Just return an iterator from that method.
The only thing you need to understand is how does it work. I mean, how asyncio or another similar framework achieves concurrency in a single thread. This is simple on a high level: just get all your code organized as iterators, then call them one-by-one until the values are exhausted.
So, for example, if you have two iterators, let's say first one yields letters and the second one yields numbers, event loop calls first one and gets 'A'
, then it calls the second one and gets 1
then it calls first one again and gets 'B'
and so on and so on, until the iterators are completed. Of course, each of these iterators can do whatever you want before yielding the next value. But, the longer it takes - the longer pause between 'switching tasks' would be. You MUST keep every iteration short:
async for
- this will allow switching task without explicit yielding.asyncio.sleep(0)
← this is an allowance for asyncio to switch task here.socket.recv()
. All tasks will be stopped until this call ends. This is why this is called async io
in the standard library: you must use theirs implementation of all I/O functions like BaseEventLoop.sock_recv()
.I'd recommend you to start (if you didn't yet) with the following docs: