Bjoern Schliessmann wrote: > Michael Sparks wrote: > >> All that said, my personal primary aim for kamaelia is to try and >> make it into a general toolkit for making concurrency easy & >> natural (as well as efficient) to work with. If full blown >> coroutines turn out to be part of that c'est le vie :-) > > I must admit I mostly didn't follow this thread, but it sparked my > interest in Kamaelia. I already did the MiniAxon tutorial and I > plan to try out Kamaelia with a project I had discussed here a > while ago (which I had to suspend until recently because of not > enough spare time; it's about simulating complex relais circuits). > Please continue the great work.
Many thanks for your kind words - the work is continuing :-) Also, I'd be interested in hearing how your project gets on - it sounds like the sort of thing that Kamaelia should be able to help with. (If it doesn't/can't, then it's a bug IMO :) > Regards & merry christmas everyone, > > > Björn > > P.S.: In the MiniAxon tutorial, I noticed a formatting problem and a > bunch of typos on one page but the feedback link doesn't work; are > you interested in a list? I'm always interested in feedback! The fact the feedback link doesn't work for you is particularly useful - I'll look into that! Best Regards, Michael. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list