Yield (multithreading)
From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
In computer science, yield is an action that occurs in a computer program during multithreading, of forcing a processor to relinquish control of the current running thread, and sending it to the end of the running queue, of the same scheduling priority.
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Examples
Different programming languages implement yielding in various ways.
pthread_yield()
in the language C, a low level implementation, provided by POSIX Threads[1]std::this_thread::yield()
in the language C++, introduced in C++11.- The Yield method is provided in various object-oriented programming languages with multithreading support, such as C# and Java.[2] OOP languages generally provide class abstractions for thread objects.
In coroutines
Coroutines are a fine-grained concurrency primitive, which may be required to yield explicitly. They may enable specifying another function to take control. Coroutines that explicitely yield allow cooperative multitasking.
References
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