Completed
How does a "for" loop work
Class Central Classrooms beta
YouTube videos curated by Class Central.
Classroom Contents
Generators, Coroutines, and Nanoservices
Automatically move to the next video in the Classroom when playback concludes
- 1 Intro
- 2 The dumbest function in the world
- 3 Bytecode from our function
- 4 What about this function?
- 5 What's the difference?
- 6 Bytecodes
- 7 What's a generator?
- 8 How does a "for" loop work
- 9 What about with our generator?
- 10 Doing it manually
- 11 "next" and generators
- 12 fib
- 13 Generator example 2: read_n
- 14 next_vowel
- 15 So, when do we use generators?
- 16 "yield" as an expression
- 17 The "send" method
- 18 Walrus yield
- 19 How can I use coroutines?
- 20 Coroutine as "nanoservices"
- 21 Example: MD5
- 22 Coroutine example 1: MD5
- 23 Coroutine example 2: Weather
- 24 Coroutine example 2.1: Weather
- 25 Coroutine example 3
- 26 Ending early
- 27 Revisiting the weather
- 28 Megaservices
- 29 Refactoring our generator
- 30 "yield from" to the rescue!
- 31 What about asyncio?
- 32 Should you use coroutines?