On Oct 10, 10:48 pm, nhwarriors <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On Oct 10, 10:52 pm, "Aaron \"Castironpi\" Brady" > > > > <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > On Oct 10, 3:32 pm, nhwarriors <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > > I am attempting to use the (new in 2.6) multiprocessing package to > > > process 2 items in a large queue of items simultaneously. I'd like to > > > be able to print to the screen the results of each item before > > > starting the next one. I'm having trouble with this so far. > > > > Here is some (useless) example code that shows how far I've gotten by > > > reading the documentation: > > > snip code > > > > This works great, except that nothing can be output until everything > > > in the queue is finished. I'd like to write out the result of fac(n) > > > for each item in the queue as it happens. > > > > I'm probably approaching the problem all wrong - can anyone set me on > > > the right track? > > > Works fine for me. Formatting time.clock(), with a different range: > > > 0.00000 fac(25000) done on Process-2 > > 0.09334 fac(25001) done on Process-1 > > 2.25036 fac(25002) done on Process-2 > > 2.41227 fac(25003) done on Process-1 > > 3.57167 fac(25004) done on Process-2 > > > I'm on Win32. > > Strange. I was on Win32 (Cygwin) earlier today and it was doing what I > reported above. At home on Linux, it works as I wanted and you > experienced. Must be something screwy with running it in Cygwin. > > Thanks guys!
You might need to flush the standard out between calls. That gets suggested from time to time. Not sure what Python's req.s are. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list