Provided by: tcl8.6-doc_8.6.14+dfsg-1build1_all bug

NAME

       coroutine, yield, yieldto - Create and produce values from coroutines

SYNOPSIS

       coroutine name command ?arg...?
       yield ?value?
       yieldto command ?arg...?                                                                                  2
       name ?value...?                                                                                           2
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

DESCRIPTION

       The  coroutine  command creates a new coroutine context (with associated command) named name and executes
       that context by calling command, passing in the other remaining arguments without further interpretation.
       Once command returns normally or with an exception  (e.g.,  an  error)  the  coroutine  context  name  is
       deleted.

       Within  the  context,  values  may  be  generated  as  results by using the yield command; if no value is
       supplied, the empty string is used.  When that is called, the context  will  suspend  execution  and  the
       coroutine  command will return the argument to yield. The execution of the context can then be resumed by
       calling the context command, optionally passing in the single value to use as the  result  of  the  yield
       call  that  caused the context to be suspended. If the coroutine context never yields and instead returns
       conventionally, the result of the coroutine command will be the result of the evaluation of the context.

       The coroutine may also suspend its execution by use of the yieldto command, which instead  of  returning, 2
       cedes  execution  to  some command called command (resolved in the context of the coroutine) and to which 2
       any number of arguments may be passed. Since every coroutine has a context command, yieldto can  be  used 2
       to  transfer control directly from one coroutine to another (this is only advisable if the two coroutines 2
       are expecting this to happen) but any command may be the target. If a  coroutine  is  suspended  by  this 2
       mechanism,  the  coroutine processing can be resumed by calling the context command optionally passing in 2
       an arbitrary number of arguments. The return value of the yieldto call will  be  the  list  of  arguments 2
       passed to the context command; it is up to the caller to decide what to do with those values.             2

       The  recommended  way  of writing a version of yield that allows resumption with multiple arguments is by 2
       using yieldto and the return command, like this:                                                          2

              proc yieldm {value} {                                                                              2
                  yieldto return -level 0 $value                                                                 2
              }                                                                                                  2

       The coroutine can also be deleted by destroying the command name, and the name of the  current  coroutine
       can  be  retrieved by using info coroutine.  If there are deletion traces on variables in the coroutine's
       implementation, they will fire at the point when the coroutine is explicitly deleted (or,  naturally,  if
       the command returns conventionally).

       At the point when command is called, the current namespace will be the global namespace and there will be
       no  stack  frames  above  it  (in the sense of upvar and uplevel). However, which command to call will be
       determined in the namespace that the coroutine command was called from.

EXAMPLES

       This example shows a coroutine that will produce an infinite sequence of even values,  and  a  loop  that
       consumes the first ten of them.

              proc allNumbers {} {
                  yield
                  set i 0
                  while 1 {
                      yield $i
                      incr i 2
                  }
              }
              coroutine nextNumber allNumbers
              for {set i 0} {$i < 10} {incr i} {
                  puts "received [nextNumber]"
              }
              rename nextNumber {}

       In this example, the coroutine acts to add up the arguments passed to it.

              coroutine accumulator apply {{} {
                  set x 0
                  while 1 {
                      incr x [yield $x]
                  }
              }}
              for {set i 0} {$i < 10} {incr i} {
                  puts "$i -> [accumulator $i]"
              }

       This  example demonstrates the use of coroutines to implement the classic Sieve of Eratosthenes algorithm
       for finding prime numbers. Note the creation of coroutines inside a coroutine.

              proc filterByFactor {source n} {
                  yield [info coroutine]
                  while 1 {
                      set x [$source]
                      if {$x % $n} {
                          yield $x
                      }
                  }
              }
              coroutine allNumbers apply {{} {while 1 {yield [incr x]}}}
              coroutine eratosthenes apply {c {
                  yield
                  while 1 {
                      set n [$c]
                      yield $n
                      set c [coroutine prime$n filterByFactor $c $n]
                  }
              }} allNumbers
              for {set i 1} {$i <= 20} {incr i} {
                  puts "prime#$i = [eratosthenes]"
              }

       This example shows how a value can be passed around a group of three coroutines that yield to each other: 2

              proc juggler {name target {value ""}} {                                                            2
                  if {$value eq ""} {                                                                            2
                      set value [yield [info coroutine]]                                                         2
                  }                                                                                              2
                  while {$value ne ""} {                                                                         2
                      puts "$name : $value"                                                                      2
                      set value [string range $value 0 end-1]                                                    2
                      lassign [yieldto $target $value] value                                                     2
                  }                                                                                              2
              }                                                                                                  2
              coroutine j1 juggler Larry [                                                                       2
                  coroutine j2 juggler Curly [                                                                   2
                      coroutine j3 juggler Moe j1]] "Nyuck!Nyuck!Nyuck!"                                         2

   DETAILED SEMANTICS
       This example demonstrates that coroutines start from the global namespace, and  that  command  resolution
       happens before the coroutine stack is created.

              proc report {where level} {
                  # Where was the caller called from?
                  set ns [uplevel 2 {namespace current}]
                  yield "made $where $level context=$ns name=[info coroutine]"
              }
              proc example {} {
                  report outer [info level]
              }
              namespace eval demo {
                  proc example {} {
                      report inner [info level]
                  }
                  proc makeExample {} {
                      puts "making from [info level]"
                      puts [coroutine coroEg example]
                  }
                  makeExample
              }

       Which  produces  the  output  below.  In  particular,  we  can  see  that stack manipulation has occurred
       (comparing the levels from the first and second line) and that the parent level in the coroutine  is  the
       global  namespace.  We  can  also  see  that  coroutine  names  are local to the current namespace if not
       qualified, and that coroutines may yield at depth (e.g., in called procedures).

              making from 2
              made inner 1 context=:: name=::demo::coroEg

SEE ALSO

       apply(3tcl), info(3tcl), proc(3tcl), return(3tcl)

KEYWORDS

       coroutine, generator

Tcl                                                    8.6                                       coroutine(3tcl)