if you do not care about the result, you can use @async
:
function foo()
sleep(100)
sum(1:100)
end
julia> @async foo()
Task (runnable) @0x00007f983b9d5f90
julia>
in the above example you get back the control of the terminal, without having to wait until the end of the execution of foo()
if you want to know the result, and keep an asynchronous behavior, you can use Task
, schedule
and fetch
together:
julia> a() = sum(1:10000)
a (generic function with 1 method)
julia> b = Task(a)
Task (runnable) @0x00007f983b9d5cf0
julia> schedule(b)
Task (done) @0x00007f983b9d5cf0
julia> fetch(b)
50005000
Here is a small piece of code I use to illustrate the different behaviors:
module async
function example1()
a() = @async sleep(2)
b = Task(a)
schedule(b)
println(fetch(b))
sleep(4)
fetch(b)
end
function example2()
a() = sleep(2)
b = Task(a)
schedule(b)
fetch(b)
end
function example3()
a() = sum(1:10000)
b = Task(a)
schedule(b)
fetch(b)
end
end;
when I run this code, I get:
julia> async.example1()
Task (runnable) @0x00007f983b9d5510
Task (done) @0x00007f983b9d5510
julia> async.example2()
julia> async.example3()
50005000
async.example2()
does not return any result, but keep the terminal busy around 2 seconds since fetch
waits for the task to complete before giving back the hand.