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I have written a little python application and here you can see how Task Manager looks during a typical run.

While the application is perfectly multithreaded, unsurprisingly it uses only one CPU core. Regardless of the fact that most modern scripting languages support multithreading, scripts can run on one CPU core only.

Ruby, Python, Lua, PHP all can only run on a single core. Even Erlang, which is said to be especially good for concurrent programming, is affected.

Is there a scripting language that has built in support for threads that are not confined to a single core?

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Answers were not quite what I expected, but the TCL answer comes close. I'd like to add perl, which (much like TCL) has interpreter-based threads.

Jython, IronPython and Groovy fall under the umbrella of combining a proven language with the proven virtual machine of another language. Thanks for your hints in this direction.

I chose Aiden Bell's answer as Accepted Answer. He does not suggest a particular language but his remark was most insightful to me.

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You're question title doesn't make sense when compared to the body of your question. Python's multiprocessing package is multiprocessing, not multithreading. I think you meant to ask "Which scripting languages support multithreading". – Dan Lorenc Jun 16 at 16:02
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This will also depend on what you call a scripting language. Does your definition include PowerShell? What about C#? It can be called from embedded script using Visual Studio Tools for Applications. – John Saunders Jun 16 at 16:07
@ Dan Lorenc: Thanks, I wasn't aware that multiprocessing is used with different meaning in different contexts. Add clarification to the question. – Ludwig Weinzierl Jun 16 at 16:15
@John Saunders: I was deliberately vague on this, because I didn't want another flame war about what makes a scripting language. I'd say take scripting language in the widest sense that is OK for you. – Ludwig Weinzierl Jun 16 at 16:19
@Ludwig: if it's ok with you, it's ok with me! I just wanted to point out that one can implement "scripting" through full-blown C# or VB.NET. – John Saunders Jun 16 at 16:24
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5 Answers

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Thread syntax may be static, but implementation across operating systems and virtual machines may change

Your scripting language may use true threading on one OS and fake-threads on another.

If you have performance requirements, it might be worth looking to ensure that the scripted threads fall through to the most beneficial layer in the OS. Userspace threads will be faster, but for largely blocking thread activity kernel threads will be better.

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He said he's not interested in "green threads". So no, userspace threads don't count. – Crescent Fresh Jun 16 at 16:05
Fair point, but most modern operating systems support kernelspace threads, in contrast none of the modern scripting languages seem to do so. True threads was meant in contrast to processes, in order to exclude answers that point me to pythons multiprocessing module or the like. – Ludwig Weinzierl Jun 16 at 16:05
@Ludwig ... This is what I mean. There is a difference between syntax support and real support. Different Python vms may handle the semantics of the same threading syntax in a different way. Same goes for scripting languages on other operating systems. – Aiden Bell Jun 16 at 16:06
@cresentfresh - Acknowledged. Missed that :) – Aiden Bell Jun 16 at 16:07
I don't actually care too much about the colour of my threads;-) Seriously, as I understand it green threads can't run on multiple cores, so they don't count. – Ludwig Weinzierl Jun 16 at 16:09
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You can freely multi-thread with the Python language in implementations such as Jython (on the JVM, as @Reginaldo mention Groovy is) and IronPython (on .NET). For the classical CPython implementation of the Python language, as @Dan's comment mentions, multiprocessing (rather than threading) is the way to freely use as many cores as you have available

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As Groovy is based on the Java virtual machine, you get support for true threads.

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You seem use a definition of "scripting language" that may raise a few eyebrows, and I don't know what that implies about your other requirements.

Anyway, have you considered TCL? It will do what you want, I believe.

Since you are including fairly general purpose languages in your list, I don't know how heavy an implementation is acceptable to you. I'd be surprised if one of the zillion scheme implementations doesn't to native threads, but off the top of my head, I can only remember the MzScheme used to but I seem to remember support was dropped. Certainly some of the common lisps do this well. If ECL does, it might work for you (embeddable). I don't use it though so I'm not sure what the state of it's threading support is, and this may of course depend on platform.

[Update] Also, iirc GHC Haskell doesn't do quite what you are asking, but may do effectively what you want since, again, iirc, it will spin of a native thread per core or so and then run it's threads across those....

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I cleaned up the list with 'scripting' languages, thanks. TCL is a good hint though, neither GIL nor green threads as it seems. – Ludwig Weinzierl Jun 16 at 16:35
TCL has it's own approach, but you can certainly get it to use all of your cores, if that's the primary issue. At least on the platforms I've done that on (which wasn't recent). I suspect it may not be in the default build either, but it can be turned on and rebuild easily enough. – simon Jun 16 at 16:40
+1 for tcl. Thread implementation is as intuitive as well – Byron Whitlock Jun 16 at 19:21
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CSScript in combination with Parallel Extensions shouldn't be a bad option. You write your code in pure C# and then run it as a script.

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