3

I'm having a hard time understanding coroutines. This is a very simple setup. Both longComputation and delay are suspend functions. The first one blocks the main thread, the latter doesn't. Why?

CoroutineScope(Dispatchers.Main).launch {
    val result = longComputation() // Blocks
    delay(10_000) // Doesn't block
}
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  • Have you tried running the task on a different thread context, such as withContext(IO)? Mar 5, 2019 at 20:23
  • Yes, this works. I guess I have to go back to the basics. Does delay also switch the dispatcher internally? Can't say I understand the sourcecode of delay
    – Kuno
    Mar 5, 2019 at 20:40
  • No delay doesn’t need another dispatcher since it’s a real suspending function which does not block the thread at any time
    – s1m0nw1
    Mar 5, 2019 at 22:34

1 Answer 1

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That depends. What does longComputation do exactly? When you mark a function as suspend, this does not mean you can't include blocking code in it. For instance, have a look at this one:

suspend fun blockingSuspendFunction(){
    BigInteger(1500, Random()).nextProbablePrime()
}

The code inside the suspend function is obviously something that utilizes the CPU and blocks the caller. By convention, this should not be done because if you call a suspend function, you expect it to not block the thread:

Convention: suspending functions do not block the caller thread. (https://medium.com/@elizarov/blocking-threads-suspending-coroutines-d33e11bf4761)

To make such a function "behave as a suspending function", the blocking has to be dispatched onto another worker thread, which (by recommendation) should happen with withContext:

suspend fun blockingSuspendFunction() = withContext(Dispatchers.Default) {
    BigInteger.probablePrime(2048, Random())
}
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  • Exactly what you mentioned. It was a heavy blocking computation. Suddenly the concept of "continuation" makes sense to me.
    – Kuno
    Mar 5, 2019 at 23:07

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