##// END OF EJS Templates
Don't reset the readline completer after each prompt...
Don't reset the readline completer after each prompt This makes it impossible to setup a custom completer. The comment says that "we must ensure that our completer is back in place," but I don't see why. All that does it make it impossible to use a different completer. One can trick IPython into not doing this by monkeypatching ip.has_readline to False, but then certain features like multiline editing are no longer enabled. See https://github.com/davidhalter/jedi/pull/321.

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itermapresult.py
67 lines | 2.3 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
"""Example of iteration through AsyncMapResults, without waiting for all results
When you call view.map(func, sequence), you will receive a special AsyncMapResult
object. These objects are used to reconstruct the results of the split call.
One feature AsyncResults provide is that they are iterable *immediately*, so
you can iterate through the actual results as they complete.
This is useful if you submit a large number of tasks that may take some time,
but want to perform logic on elements in the result, or even abort subsequent
tasks in cases where you are searching for the first affirmative result.
By default, the results will match the ordering of the submitted sequence, but
if you call `map(...ordered=False)`, then results will be provided to the iterator
on a first come first serve basis.
Authors
-------
* MinRK
"""
from __future__ import print_function
import time
from IPython import parallel
# create client & view
rc = parallel.Client()
dv = rc[:]
v = rc.load_balanced_view()
# scatter 'id', so id=0,1,2 on engines 0,1,2
dv.scatter('id', rc.ids, flatten=True)
print("Engine IDs: ", dv['id'])
# create a Reference to `id`. This will be a different value on each engine
ref = parallel.Reference('id')
print("sleeping for `id` seconds on each engine")
tic = time.time()
ar = dv.apply(time.sleep, ref)
for i,r in enumerate(ar):
print("%i: %.3f"%(i, time.time()-tic))
def sleep_here(t):
import time
time.sleep(t)
return id,t
# one call per task
print("running with one call per task")
amr = v.map(sleep_here, [.01*t for t in range(100)])
tic = time.time()
for i,r in enumerate(amr):
print("task %i on engine %i: %.3f" % (i, r[0], time.time()-tic))
print("running with four calls per task")
# with chunksize, we can have four calls per task
amr = v.map(sleep_here, [.01*t for t in range(100)], chunksize=4)
tic = time.time()
for i,r in enumerate(amr):
print("task %i on engine %i: %.3f" % (i, r[0], time.time()-tic))
print("running with two calls per task, with unordered results")
# We can even iterate through faster results first, with ordered=False
amr = v.map(sleep_here, [.01*t for t in range(100,0,-1)], ordered=False, chunksize=2)
tic = time.time()
for i,r in enumerate(amr):
print("slept %.2fs on engine %i: %.3f" % (r[1], r[0], time.time()-tic))