Small corrections.
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pep-3156.txt
37
pep-3156.txt
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@ -360,8 +360,10 @@ Basic Callbacks
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'''''''''''''''
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- ``call_soon(callback, *args)``. This schedules a callback to be
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called as soon as possible. It guarantees that callbacks are called
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in the order in which they were scheduled.
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called as soon as possible. Returns a Handle representing the
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callback, whose ``cancel()`` method can be used to cancel the
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callback. It guarantees that callbacks are called in the order in
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which they were scheduled.
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- ``call_later(delay, callback, *args)``. Arrange for
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``callback(*args)`` to be called approximately ``delay`` seconds in
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@ -371,9 +373,10 @@ Basic Callbacks
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time will be called in an undefined order.
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- ``call_at(when, callback, *args)``. This is like ``call_later()``,
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but the time is expressed as an absolute time. There is a simple
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equivalency: ``loop.call_later(delay, callback, *args)`` is the same
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as ``loop.call_at(loop.time() + delay, callback, *args)``.
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but the time is expressed as an absolute time. Returns a similar
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Handle. There is a simple equivalency: ``loop.call_later(delay,
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callback, *args)`` is the same as ``loop.call_at(loop.time() +
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delay, callback, *args)``.
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Note: A previous version of this PEP defined a method named
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``call_repeatedly()``, which promised to call a callback at regular
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@ -785,11 +788,11 @@ Handles
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-------
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The various methods for registering one-off callbacks
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(``call_soon()``, ``call_later()`` and ``call_at()``) all return an
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object representing the registration that can be used to cancel the
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callback. This object is called a Handle (although its class name is
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not necessarily ``Handle``). Handles are opaque and have only one
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public method:
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(``call_soon()``, ``call_later()``, ``call_at()`` and
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``call_soon_threadsafe()``) all return an object representing the
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registration that can be used to cancel the callback. This object is
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called a Handle (although its class name is not necessarily
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``Handle``). Handles are opaque and have only one public method:
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- ``cancel()``. Cancel the callback.
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@ -834,10 +837,10 @@ public API is as follows, indicating the differences with PEP 3148:
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Difference with PEP 3148: The callback is never called immediately,
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and always in the context of the caller. (Typically, a context is a
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thread.) You can think of this as calling the callback through
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``call_soon()``. Note that the callback (unlike all other callbacks
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defined in this PEP, and ignoring the convention from the section
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"Callback Style" below) is always called with a single argument, the
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Future object, and should not be a Handle object.
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``call_soon()``. Note that in order to match PEP 3148, the callback
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(unlike all other callbacks defined in this PEP, and ignoring the
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convention from the section "Callback Style" below) is always called
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with a single argument, the Future object.
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- ``set_result(result)``. The Future must not be done (nor cancelled)
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already. This makes the Future done and schedules the callbacks.
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@ -1312,9 +1315,9 @@ task's exception.
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Cancelling a task that's not done yet prevents its coroutine from
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completing. In this case a ``CancelledError`` exception is thrown
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into the coroutine that it may catch to further handle cancellation.
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If the exception is not caught, the generator will be properly
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finalized anyway, as described in PEP 342.
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into the coroutine, which it may catch to propagate cancellation to
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other Futures. If the exception is not caught, the generator will be
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properly finalized anyway, as described in PEP 342.
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Tasks are also useful for interoperating between coroutines and
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callback-based frameworks like Twisted. After converting a coroutine
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