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Kirill Smelkov
cpython
Commits
e4070130
Commit
e4070130
authored
Sep 30, 2019
by
Kyle Stanley
Committed by
Yury Selivanov
Sep 30, 2019
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Fix and improve `asyncio.run()` docs (GH-16403)
parent
aca8c406
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3
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3 changed files
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4 additions
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10 deletions
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-10
Doc/glossary.rst
Doc/glossary.rst
+1
-1
Doc/library/asyncio-task.rst
Doc/library/asyncio-task.rst
+2
-4
Lib/asyncio/runners.py
Lib/asyncio/runners.py
+1
-5
No files found.
Doc/glossary.rst
View file @
e4070130
...
...
@@ -247,7 +247,7 @@ Glossary
Fortran
contiguous
arrays
,
the
first
index
varies
the
fastest
.
coroutine
Coroutines
is
a
more
generalized
form
of
subroutines
.
Subroutines
are
Coroutines
are
a
more
generalized
form
of
subroutines
.
Subroutines
are
entered
at
one
point
and
exited
at
another
point
.
Coroutines
can
be
entered
,
exited
,
and
resumed
at
many
different
points
.
They
can
be
implemented
with
the
:
keyword
:`
async
def
`
statement
.
See
also
...
...
Doc/library/asyncio-task.rst
View file @
e4070130
...
...
@@ -212,6 +212,8 @@ Running an asyncio Program
.. function:: run(coro, \*, debug=False)
Execute the :term:`coroutine` *coro* and return the result.
This function runs the passed coroutine, taking care of
managing the asyncio event loop, *finalizing asynchronous
generators*, and closing the threadpool.
...
...
@@ -225,10 +227,6 @@ Running an asyncio Program
the end. It should be used as a main entry point for asyncio
programs, and should ideally only be called once.
Return a result of *coro* execution, or raise a :exc:`RuntimeError`
if ``asyncio.run()`` is called from a running event loop, or a
:exc:`ValueError` if *coro* is not a courutine.
Example::
async def main():
...
...
Lib/asyncio/runners.py
View file @
e4070130
...
...
@@ -6,7 +6,7 @@ from . import tasks
def
run
(
main
,
*
,
debug
=
False
):
"""
Run a coroutine
.
"""
Execute the coroutine and return the result
.
This function runs the passed coroutine, taking care of
managing the asyncio event loop and finalizing asynchronous
...
...
@@ -21,10 +21,6 @@ def run(main, *, debug=False):
It should be used as a main entry point for asyncio programs, and should
ideally only be called once.
Return a result of *coro* execution, or raise a RuntimeError
if `asyncio.run()`is called from a running event loop, or a ValueError
if `main` is not a courutine.
Example:
async def main():
...
...
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