←back to thread

320 points willm | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.201s | source
Show context
atomicnumber3 ◴[] No.45106455[source]
The author gets close to what I think the root problem is, but doesn't call it out.

The truth is that in python, async was too little, too late. By the time it was introduced, most people who actually needed to do lots of io concurrently had their own workarounds (forking, etc) and people who didn't actually need it had found out how to get by without it (multiprocessing etc).

Meanwhile, go showed us what good green threads can look like. Then java did it too. Meanwhile, js had better async support the whole time. But all it did was show us that async code just plain sucks compared to green thread code that can just block, instead of having to do the async dances.

So, why engage with it when you already had good solutions?

replies(24): >>45106558 #>>45106616 #>>45106659 #>>45106663 #>>45106684 #>>45106758 #>>45107048 #>>45107148 #>>45107247 #>>45107394 #>>45107701 #>>45107865 #>>45108486 #>>45108978 #>>45109142 #>>45109610 #>>45109958 #>>45110033 #>>45110052 #>>45110805 #>>45111877 #>>45111901 #>>45113010 #>>45113188 #
1. pkulak ◴[] No.45110052[source]
Green threads can be nicer to program in, but it’s not like there’s no cost. You still need a stack for every green thread, just like you need one for every normal thread. I think it’s worth it to figure out a good system for stackless async. Something like Kotlin is about as good as it gets. Rust is getting there, despite all the ownership issues, which would exist in green threads too.