main-loop
is a useful function included in strandio
that:
- lets you create a loop
- lets you try the same input against multiple functions
- queues input on
%skip
and then dequeues from the beginning on%done
main-loop
takes a list of functions as its argument but only moves to the next item in the list on a [%fail %ignore ~]
(whose usage we'll describe in the second example). In other cases it restarts from the top, so providing multiple functions is only useful for trying the same input against multiple functions.
Create a loop
This is useful if you want to (for example) take an arbitrary number of facts.
Here's an example of a thread that subscribes to graph-store
for updates and nicely prints the messages (an extremely basic chat reader):
chat-watch.hoon
/- spider
/+ *strandio, *graph-store
=, strand=strand:spider
=>
|%
++ watcher
=/ m (strand ,~)
^- form:m
%- (main-loop ,~)
:~ |= ~
^- form:m
;< =cage bind:m (take-fact /graph-store)
=/ up=update !< update q.cage
?. ?=(%add-nodes -.q.up)
(pure:m ~)
=/ res=tape "{(scow %p entity.resource.q.up)}/{(scow %tas name.resource.q.up)}"
=/ node-list `(list (pair index node))`~(tap by nodes.q.up)
?~ node-list
(pure:m ~)
?: (gth (lent node-list) 1)
%- (slog leaf+"{res}: update skipped>" ~)
(pure:m ~)
=/ from=tape (scow %p author.post.q.i.node-list)
=/ conts `(list content)`contents.post.q.i.node-list
?~ conts
(pure:m ~)
?: (gth (lent conts) 1)
%- (slog leaf+"{res}: [{from}] message skipped>" ~)
(pure:m ~)
?. ?=(%text -.i.conts)
%- (slog leaf+"{res}: [{from}] message skipped>" ~)
(pure:m ~)
=/ msg=tape (trip text.i.conts)
%- (slog leaf+"{res}: [{from}] {msg}" ~)
(pure:m ~)
==
--
^- thread:spider
|= arg=vase
=/ m (strand ,vase)
^- form:m
;< now=@da bind:m get-time
;< ~ bind:m (watch-our /graph-store %graph-store /updates)
;< ~ bind:m watcher
(pure:m !>(~))
Save it in /ted
, |commit %base
, and run it with -chat-watch
. Now try typing some messages in the chat and you should see them printed like:
~zod/test-8488: [~zod] x
~zod/test-8488: [~zod] blah blah blah
~zod/test-8488: [~zod] foo
~zod/test-8488: [~zod] some text
~zod/test-8488: [~zod] .
To stop this hit backspace and then run :spider|kill
.
First we subscribe to graph-store for updates with watch-our
, then we call the watcher arm of the core we have added. Watcher just calls main-loop
:
=/ m (strand ,~)
^- form:m
%- (main-loop ,~)
...
...with a list of functions. In this case we've just given it one. Our function first calls take-fact
:
;< =cage bind:m (take-fact /graph-store)
...to receive the fact and then the rest is just processing & printing logic which isn't too important.
Once this is done, main-loop will just call the same function again which will again wait for a fact and so on. So you see how it creates a loop. The only way to exit the loop is with a %fail
or else by poking spider with a %spider-stop
and the thread's tid
.
Try input against multiple functions
To try the same input against multiple function you must use another strandio
function handle
. Handle converts a %skip
into a [fail %ignore ~]
. When main-loop
sees a [fail %ignore ~]
it tries the next function in its list with the same input.
Here are two files: tester.hoon
and tested.hoon
. Save them both to /ted
in the %base
desk, |commit %base
and run -tester
. You should see:
> -tester
baz
~
tester.hoon
/- spider
/+ *strandio
=, strand=strand:spider
^- thread:spider
|= arg=vase
=/ m (strand ,vase)
^- form:m
;< tid=tid:spider bind:m (start-thread %tested)
;< our=ship bind:m get-our
;< ~ bind:m %- poke
:- [our %spider]
[%spider-input !>([tid `cage`[%baz !>("baz")]])]
(pure:m !>(~))
tested.hoon
/- spider
/+ *strandio
=, strand=strand:spider
=>
|%
++ looper
=/ m (strand ,~)
^- form:m
%- (main-loop ,~)
:~ |= ~
^- form:m
;< =vase bind:m ((handle ,vase) (take-poke %foo))
=/ msg=tape !<(tape vase)
%- (slog leaf+"{msg}" ~)
(pure:m ~)
::
|= ~
^- form:m
;< =vase bind:m ((handle ,vase) (take-poke %bar))
=/ msg=tape !<(tape vase)
%- (slog leaf+"{msg}" ~)
(pure:m ~)
::
|= ~
^- form:m
;< =vase bind:m ((handle ,vase) (take-poke %baz))
=/ msg=tape !<(tape vase)
%- (slog leaf+"{msg}" ~)
(pure:m ~)
==
--
^- thread:spider
|= arg=vase
=/ m (strand ,vase)
^- form:m
;< ~ bind:m looper
(pure:m !>(~))
The first thread (tester.hoon) just starts the second thread and pokes it with a vase containing "baz"
and the mark %baz
.
The second thread (tested.hoon) has a main-loop
with a list of three take-poke
strands. As you can see it's the third one expecting a mark of %baz
but yet it still successfully prints the message. This is because it tried the previous two which each saw the wrong mark and said %skip
.
Notice we've wrapped the take-poke
s in handle
to convert the %skip
s into [%fail %ignore ~]
s, which main-loop
takes to mean it should try the next function with the same input.