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The features are covered well in the readme, but I just wonder if you would consider
writing a bit more about the implementation, and and comparisons to the unstable generators.
Thank you
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered:
Without stackfulness and first-class semantics, some useful execution control flows cannot be supported (for instance cooperative multitasking or checkpointing).
So, maybe Corosensi is both stackful, and provides first-class continuations?, which means effectively full cooperative multitasking and checkpointing are possible?? I'm not really sure.
Goodness, sorry. I've been reading a bit more. I guess stackful coroutines are the same as Goroutines, or green threads. I was confused, and thought all coroutines were kept on the same stack. Apparently not.
Yes this crate only provides stackful coroutines. You can build a cooperative scheduler on top of it, but this crate only provide the low-level (but safe) task switching functionality.
This looks amazing! Thank you for developing it.
I'm learning about a coroutines and generators under Rust,
and that's how I discovered this. (I'd like to use them for protocol implementation)
I wonder if you could share a bit about Corosensi vs the unstable generators feature in Rust.
Like, it is stackfull, or stackless: link
The features are covered well in the readme, but I just wonder if you would consider
writing a bit more about the implementation, and and comparisons to the unstable generators.
Thank you
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: