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- bash - Difference between wait and sleep - Stack Overflow
Difference between wait and sleep Asked 13 years ago Modified 6 years, 4 months ago Viewed 585k times
- bash - What does wait $! mean - Stack Overflow
To add to this answer: Executing the command (su ) in the background and immediately wait ing for it can be useful when using set -e and writing conditions whose code should still have set -e in place (code that occurs in conditions is usually exempt from set -e)
- Difference between wait () vs sleep () in Java - Stack Overflow
What is the difference between a wait() and sleep() in Threads? Is my understanding that a wait() -ing Thread is still in running mode and uses CPU cycles but a sleep() -ing does not consume any CPU cycles correct? Why do we have both wait() and sleep()? How does their implementation vary at a lower level?
- CALL command vs. START with WAIT option - Stack Overflow
If you use this command: start B WAIT "" "LongRunningTask exe" "parameters" You will be able to run multiple instances of the bat and exe, while still waiting for the task to finish before the bat continues executing the remaining commands
- A simple scenario using wait () and notify () in java
The wait() and notify() methods are designed to provide a mechanism to allow a thread to block until a specific condition is met For this I assume you're wanting to write a blocking queue implementation, where you have some fixed size backing-store of elements The first thing you have to do is to identify the conditions that you want the methods to wait for In this case, you will want the
- How to set delay in vbscript - Stack Overflow
How to set delay in vbscript? WScript Sleep(100) does not work on Windows XP, Vista
- wait - How do I make a delay in Java? - Stack Overflow
613 I am trying to do something in Java and I need something to wait delay for an amount of seconds in a while loop
- c# - await vs Task. Wait - Deadlock? - Stack Overflow
391 Wait and await - while similar conceptually - are actually completely different Wait will synchronously block until the task completes So the current thread is literally blocked waiting for the task to complete As a general rule, you should use " async all the way down"; that is, don't block on async code
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