A proof of concept for an experimental structured concurrency framework written in Python
Go to file
Mattia Giambirtone faccd4146d
Added unregister_event and test for smart events
2023-06-02 11:01:24 +02:00
.idea Loop now uses the clock's deadline method 2023-06-01 20:02:07 +02:00
structio Added unregister_event and test for smart events 2023-06-02 11:01:24 +02:00
tests Added unregister_event and test for smart events 2023-06-02 11:01:24 +02:00
.gitignore Initial commit 2023-05-15 18:15:45 +02:00
LICENSE Initial commit 2023-05-15 18:15:45 +02:00
README.md Added a bunch of comments and docs and other things 2023-05-19 15:43:55 +02:00
setup.py Initial work 2023-05-15 18:25:02 +02:00

README.md

structio

A proof of concept for an experimental structured concurrency framework written in Python

Disclaimer

This library is highly experimental and currently in alpha stage (it doesn't even have a proper version number yet, that's how alpha it is), so it's not production ready (and probably never will be). If you want the fancy structured concurrency paradigm in a library that works today, consider trio, from which structio is heavily inspired (curio is also worth looking into, although technically it doesn't implement SC).

Why?

This library (and its predecessors) is just a way for me to test my knowledge and make sure I understand the basics of structured concurrency and building solid coroutine runners so that I can implement the paradigm in my own programming language. For more info, see here.