I'm trying to execute a function in its own thread, due to this method taking a very long time to complete. I really don't see the need to inherit the Thread class, as basically every online example shows (at least the ones I found), nor do I want to. I want to pass the method into the Thread constructor and let it go wild.
The function I'm trying to execute is in a modulate called tribalwars and has the following signature: def populate_all_tribes(data_dir) Below is the error I'm getting after initializing the thread: >>> t = th.Thread(target=tribalwars.populate_all_tribes, args=("data/w7/")) >>> t.start() Exception in thread Thread-1: Traceback (most recent call last): File "/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/2.5/lib/ python2.5/threading.py", line 462, in __bootstrap self.run() File "/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/2.5/lib/ python2.5/threading.py", line 442, in run self.__target(*self.__args, **self.__kwargs) TypeError: populate_all_tribes() takes exactly 1 argument (8 given) Can anybody clue me in on what I'm doing wrong? Does my function need to have a different signature (i.e. *args, **kwargs) in order for this to work? Thanks, skawaii -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list