On Mon, 04 Feb 2008 19:22:29 -0800, castironpi wrote: > Some iterables and control loops can be multithreaded. Worries that > it takes a syntax change. > > for X in A: > def f( x ): > normal suite( x ) > start_new_thread( target= f, args= ( X, ) ) > > Perhaps a control-flow wrapper, or method on iterable. > > @parallel > for X in A: > normal suite( X ) > > for X in parallel( A ): > normal suite( X ) > > Discussion presued about multi-core systems. Allow user certain > control over what runs on multi-core. Clearly, not generally > applicable. -- But, from __future__ import does change syntax.
Why not simply writing a function? def execute_parallel(f, A): for args in A: start_new_thread(target=f, args=args) def f(x): normal_suit(x) parallel(f, A) Ciao, Marc 'BlackJack' Rintsch -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list