X-Git-Url: http://info.iut-bm.univ-fcomte.fr/pub/gitweb/simgrid.git/blobdiff_plain/b9964e3f91a54279a938c17a9ddb92d3da9ed99f..HEAD:/examples/python/actor-create/actor-create.py diff --git a/examples/python/actor-create/actor-create.py b/examples/python/actor-create/actor-create.py index 4bb1d52c01..2c7f623f81 100644 --- a/examples/python/actor-create/actor-create.py +++ b/examples/python/actor-create/actor-create.py @@ -1,23 +1,25 @@ -# Copyright (c) 2006-2019. The SimGrid Team. All rights reserved. +# Copyright (c) 2006-2023. The SimGrid Team. All rights reserved. # # This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it # under the terms of the license (GNU LGPL) which comes with this package. -# This example shows how to declare and start your actors. -# -# The first step is to declare the code of your actors (what they do exactly does not matter to this example) and then -# you ask SimGrid to start your actors. There is three ways of doing so: -# - Directly, by instantiating your actor as parameter to Actor::create() -# - By first registering your actors before instantiating it; -# - Through the deployment file. -# -# This example shows all these solutions, even if you obviously should use only one of these solutions to start your -# actors. The most advised solution is to use a deployment file, as it creates a clear separation between your -# application and the settings to test it. This is a better scientific methodology. Actually, starting an actor with -# Actor.create() is mostly useful to start an actor from another actor. +""" +This example shows how to declare and start your actors. + +The first step is to declare the code of your actors (what they do exactly does not matter to this example) and then +you ask SimGrid to start your actors. There is three ways of doing so: +- Directly, by instantiating your actor as parameter to Actor::create() +- By first registering your actors before instantiating it; +- Through the deployment file. + +This example shows all these solutions, even if you obviously should use only one of these solutions to start your +actors. The most advised solution is to use a deployment file, as it creates a clear separation between your +application and the settings to test it. This is a better scientific methodology. Actually, starting an actor with +Actor.create() is mostly useful to start an actor from another actor. +""" import sys -from simgrid import * +from simgrid import Actor, Engine, Host, Mailbox, this_actor def receiver(mailbox_name): @@ -59,7 +61,7 @@ class Sender: Later, this actor class is instantiated twice in the simulation. """ - def __init__(self, msg = "GaBuZoMeu", mbox = "mb42"): + def __init__(self, msg="GaBuZoMeu", mbox="mb42"): self.msg = msg self.mbox = mbox