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I want to write a function, let's say yield_posts that polls a RESTful API regularly and can be used in for loop that runs forever, like this:

for post in yield_posts():
    do_something_with(post)

I have the following pseudo-code in mind

def yield_posts():
    while True:
        new_posts = request_new_posts()
        time.sleep(10)
        for post in new_posts:
            if check_in_db(post):
                continue
            yield post
            add_to_db(post)

Will this work for its intended purpose, or is there a better method?

1 Answer 1

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What you have in mind will work perfectly. When you call the function, it will loop forever, doing its work and then waiting for a given amount of time (10 seconds here). You may want to look into the Thread class, however, if you want to do other things while this function is running, as you won't be able to do anything while the function is on time.sleep(). Not to mention that the while loop will mean that the function never ends.

The Threading module works exactly as it sounds. It creates various threads for you to utilize one thread doing repetitive work (in your case calling a function repetitively every 10 seconds) while leaving the main thread open for other work.

The way I would add your function as a separate thread would be as follows:

from threading import Thread
class Yield_Posts(Thread):
    run():
        while True:
            #do whatever you need to repetitively in here, like
            time.sleep(10)
            #etc.

separateThread = Yield_Posts()
separateThread.start()
#do other things here, the separate thread will be running at the same time.
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  • If this function is meant to be imported, this means that the main thread of __main__ will be free to do whatever while the imported Yield_Posts would run on its own separate thread, right?
    – yayu
    Nov 20, 2014 at 7:05
  • Yes, that's correct The bottom three lines are running in the __main__ thread. As soon as you call separateThread.start(), the program creates a new thread and executes the run() function in the new thread, leaving the __main__ thread free to do other things. Nov 20, 2014 at 20:01

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