'What does the suspend function mean in a Kotlin Coroutine?
I'm reading Kotlin Coroutine and know that it is based on suspend
function. But what does suspend
mean?
Coroutine or function gets suspended?
From https://kotlinlang.org/docs/reference/coroutines.html
Basically, coroutines are computations that can be suspended without blocking a thread
I heard people often say "suspend function". But I think it is the coroutine who gets suspended because it is waiting for the function to finished? "suspend" usually means "cease operation", in this case the coroutine is idle.
Should we say the coroutine is suspended ?
Which coroutine gets suspended?
From https://kotlinlang.org/docs/reference/coroutines.html
To continue the analogy, await() can be a suspending function (hence also callable from within an async {} block) that suspends a coroutine until some computation is done and returns its result:
async { // Here I call it the outer async coroutine
...
// Here I call computation the inner coroutine
val result = computation.await()
...
}
It says "that suspends a coroutine until some computation is done", but coroutine is like a lightweight thread. So if the coroutine is suspended, how can the computation is done ?
We see await
is called on computation
, so it might be async
that returns Deferred
, which means it can start another coroutine
fun computation(): Deferred<Boolean> {
return async {
true
}
}
The quote say that suspends a coroutine. Does it mean suspend
the outer async
coroutine, or suspend
the inner computation
coroutine?
Does suspend
mean that while outer async
coroutine is waiting (await
) for the inner computation
coroutine to finish, it (the outer async
coroutine) idles (hence the name suspend) and returns thread to the thread pool, and when the child computation
coroutine finishes, it (the outer async
coroutine) wakes up, takes another thread from the pool and continues?
The reason I mention the thread is because of https://kotlinlang.org/docs/tutorials/coroutines-basic-jvm.html
The thread is returned to the pool while the coroutine is waiting, and when the waiting is done, the coroutine resumes on a free thread in the pool
Solution 1:[1]
Suspending functions are at the center of everything coroutines. A suspending function is simply a function that can be paused and resumed at a later time. They can execute a long running operation and wait for it to complete without blocking.
The syntax of a suspending function is similar to that of a regular function except for the addition of the suspend
keyword. It can take a parameter and have a return type. However, suspending functions can only be invoked by another suspending function or within a coroutine.
suspend fun backgroundTask(param: Int): Int {
// long running operation
}
Under the hood, suspend functions are converted by the compiler to another function without the suspend keyword, that takes an addition parameter of type Continuation<T>
. The function above for example, will be converted by the compiler to this:
fun backgroundTask(param: Int, callback: Continuation<Int>): Int {
// long running operation
}
Continuation<T>
is an interface that contains two functions that are invoked to resume the coroutine with a return value or with an exception if an error had occurred while the function was suspended.
interface Continuation<in T> {
val context: CoroutineContext
fun resume(value: T)
fun resumeWithException(exception: Throwable)
}
Solution 2:[2]
But what does suspend mean?
Functions marked with the suspend
keyword are transformed at compile time to be made asynchronous under the hood, even though they appear synchronous in the source code.
The best source to understand this transformation IMO is the talk "Deep Dive into Coroutines" by Roman Elizarov.
This includes the following changes to the function:
- The return type is changed to
Unit
, which is how Kotlin represents void functions - It gets an additional
Continuation<X>
argument (where X is the former return type of the function that was declared in the code). This continuation acts like a callback. - Its body is turned into a state machine (instead of literally using callbacks, for efficiency). This is done by breaking down the body of the function into parts around so called suspension points, and turning those parts into the branches of a big switch. The state about the local variables and where we are in the switch is stored inside the
Continuation
object.
This is a very quick way to describe it, but you can see it happen with more details and with examples in the talk. This whole transformation is basically how the "suspend/resume" mechanism is implemented under the hood.
Coroutine or function gets suspended?
At a high level, we say that calling a suspending function suspends the coroutine, meaning the current thread can start executing another coroutine. So, the coroutine is said to be suspended rather than the function.
In fact, call sites of suspending functions are called "suspension points" for this reason.
Which coroutine gets suspended?
Let's look at your code and break down what happens:
// 1. this call starts a new coroutine (let's call it C1).
// If there were code after it, it would be executed concurrently with
// the body of this async
async {
...
// 2. this is a regular function call, so we go to computation()'s body
val deferred = computation()
// 4. because await() is suspendING, it suspends coroutine C1.
// This means that if we had a single thread in our dispatcher,
// it would now be free to go execute C2
// 7. once C2 completes, C1 is resumed with the result `true` of C2's async
val result = deferred.await()
...
// 8. C1 can now keep going in the current thread until it gets
// suspended again (or not)
}
fun computation(): Deferred<Boolean> {
// 3. this async call starts a second coroutine (C2). Depending on the
// dispatcher you're using, you may have one or more threads.
// 3.a. If you have multiple threads, the block of this async could be
// executed in parallel of C1 in another thread
// 3.b. If you have only one thread, the block is sort of "queued" but
// not executed right away (as in an event loop)
//
// In both cases, we say that this block executes "concurrently"
// with C1, and computation() immediately returns the Deferred
// instance to its caller (unless a special dispatcher or
// coroutine start argument is used, but let's keep it simple).
return async {
// 5. this may now be executed
true
// 6. C2 is now completed, so the thread can go back to executing
// another coroutine (e.g. C1 here)
}
}
The outer async
starts a coroutine. When it calls computation()
, the inner async
starts a second coroutine. Then, the call to await()
suspends the execution of the outer async
coroutine, until the execution of the inner async
's coroutine is over.
You can even see that with a single thread: the thread will execute the outer async
's beginning, then call computation()
and reach the inner async
. At this point, the body of the inner async is skipped, and the thread continues executing the outer async
until it reaches await()
.
await()
is a "suspension point", because await
is a suspending function.
This means that the outer coroutine is suspended, and thus the thread starts executing the inner one. When it is done, it comes back to execute the end of the outer async
.
Does suspend mean that while outer async coroutine is waiting (await) for the inner computation coroutine to finish, it (the outer async coroutine) idles (hence the name suspend) and returns thread to the thread pool, and when the child computation coroutine finishes, it (the outer async coroutine) wakes up, takes another thread from the pool and continues?
Yes, precisely.
The way this is actually achieved is by turning every suspending function into a state machine, where each "state" corresponds to a suspension point inside this suspend function. Under the hood, the function can be called multiple times, with the information about which suspension point it should start executing from (you should really watch the video I linked for more info about that).
Solution 3:[3]
To understand what exactly it means to suspend a coroutine, I suggest you go through this code:
import kotlinx.coroutines.Dispatchers.Unconfined
import kotlinx.coroutines.GlobalScope
import kotlinx.coroutines.launch
import kotlin.coroutines.Continuation
import kotlin.coroutines.resume
import kotlin.coroutines.suspendCoroutine
var continuation: Continuation<Int>? = null
fun main() {
GlobalScope.launch(Unconfined) {
val a = a()
println("Result is $a")
}
10.downTo(0).forEach {
continuation!!.resume(it)
}
}
suspend fun a(): Int {
return b()
}
suspend fun b(): Int {
while (true) {
val i = suspendCoroutine<Int> { cont -> continuation = cont }
if (i == 0) {
return 0
}
}
}
The Unconfined
coroutine dispatcher eliminates the magic of coroutine dispatching and allows us to focus directly on bare coroutines.
The code inside the launch
block starts executing right away on the current thread, as a part of the launch
call. What happens is as follows:
- Evaluate
val a = a()
- This chains to
b()
, reachingsuspendCoroutine
. - Function
b()
executes the block passed tosuspendCoroutine
and then returns a specialCOROUTINE_SUSPENDED
value. This value is not observable through the Kotlin programming model, but that's what the compiled Java method does. - Function
a()
, seeing this return value, itself also returns it. - The
launch
block does the same and control now returns to the line after thelaunch
invocation:10.downTo(0)...
Note that, at this point, you have the same effect as if the code inside the launch
block and your fun main
code are executing concurrently. It just happens that all this is happening on a single native thread so the launch
block is "suspended".
Now, inside the forEach
looping code, the program reads the continuation
that the b()
function wrote and resumes
it with the value of 10
. resume()
is implemented in such a way that it will be as if the suspendCoroutine
call returned with the value you passed in. So you suddenly find yourself in the middle of executing b()
. The value you passed to resume()
gets assigned to i
and checked against 0
. If it's not zero, the while (true)
loop goes on inside b()
, again reaching suspendCoroutine
, at which point your resume()
call returns, and now you go through another looping step in forEach()
. This goes on until finally you resume with 0
, then the println
statement runs and the program completes.
The above analysis should give you the important intuition that "suspending a coroutine" means returning the control back to the innermost launch
invocation (or, more generally, coroutine builder). If a coroutine suspends again after resuming, the resume()
call ends and control returns to the caller of resume()
.
The presence of a coroutine dispatcher makes this reasoning less clear-cut because most of them immediately submit your code to another thread. In that case the above story happens in that other thread, and the coroutine dispatcher also manages the continuation
object so it can resume it when the return value is available.
Solution 4:[4]
As many good answers are already there, I would like to post a simpler example for others.
runBlocking use case :
- myMethod() is
suspend
function runBlocking { }
starts a Coroutine in blocking way. It is similar to how we were blocking normal threads withThread
class and notifying blocked threads after certain events.runBlocking { }
does block the current executing thread, until the coroutine (body between{}
) gets completedoverride fun onCreate(savedInstanceState: Bundle?) { super.onCreate(savedInstanceState) setContentView(R.layout.main_activity) Log.i(TAG,"Outer code started on Thread : " + Thread.currentThread().name); runBlocking { Log.d(TAG,"Inner code started on Thread : " + Thread.currentThread().name + " making outer code suspend"); myMethod(); } Log.i(TAG,"Outer code resumed on Thread : " + Thread.currentThread().name); } private suspend fun myMethod() { withContext(Dispatchers.Default) { for(i in 1..5) { Log.d(TAG,"Inner code i : $i on Thread : " + Thread.currentThread().name); } }
This outputs :
I/TAG: Outer code started on Thread : main
D/TAG: Inner code started on Thread : main making outer code suspend
// ---- main thread blocked here, it will wait until coroutine gets completed ----
D/TAG: Inner code i : 1 on Thread : DefaultDispatcher-worker-2
D/TAG: Inner code i : 2 on Thread : DefaultDispatcher-worker-2
D/TAG: Inner code i : 3 on Thread : DefaultDispatcher-worker-2
D/TAG: Inner code i : 4 on Thread : DefaultDispatcher-worker-2
D/TAG: Inner code i : 5 on Thread : DefaultDispatcher-worker-2
// ---- main thread resumes as coroutine is completed ----
I/TAG: Outer code resumed on Thread : main
launch use case :
launch { }
starts a coroutine concurrently.- This means that when we specify launch, a coroutine starts execution on
worker
thread. - The
worker
thread and outer thread (from which we calledlaunch { }
) both runs concurrently. Internally, JVM may perform Preemptive Threading When we require multiple tasks to run in parallel, we can use this. There are
scopes
which specify lifetime of coroutine. If we specifyGlobalScope
, the coroutine will work until application lifetime ends.override fun onCreate(savedInstanceState: Bundle?) { super.onCreate(savedInstanceState) setContentView(R.layout.main_activity) Log.i(TAG,"Outer code started on Thread : " + Thread.currentThread().name); GlobalScope.launch(Dispatchers.Default) { Log.d(TAG,"Inner code started on Thread : " + Thread.currentThread().name + " making outer code suspend"); myMethod(); } Log.i(TAG,"Outer code resumed on Thread : " + Thread.currentThread().name); } private suspend fun myMethod() { withContext(Dispatchers.Default) { for(i in 1..5) { Log.d(TAG,"Inner code i : $i on Thread : " + Thread.currentThread().name); } } }
This Outputs :
10806-10806/com.example.viewmodelapp I/TAG: Outer code started on Thread : main
10806-10806/com.example.viewmodelapp I/TAG: Outer code resumed on Thread : main
// ---- In this example, main had only 2 lines to execute. So, worker thread logs start only after main thread logs complete
// ---- In some cases, where main has more work to do, the worker thread logs get overlap with main thread logs
10806-10858/com.example.viewmodelapp D/TAG: Inner code started on Thread : DefaultDispatcher-worker-1 making outer code suspend
10806-10858/com.example.viewmodelapp D/TAG: Inner code i : 1 on Thread : DefaultDispatcher-worker-1
10806-10858/com.example.viewmodelapp D/TAG: Inner code i : 2 on Thread : DefaultDispatcher-worker-1
10806-10858/com.example.viewmodelapp D/TAG: Inner code i : 3 on Thread : DefaultDispatcher-worker-1
10806-10858/com.example.viewmodelapp D/TAG: Inner code i : 4 on Thread : DefaultDispatcher-worker-1
10806-10858/com.example.viewmodelapp D/TAG: Inner code i : 5 on Thread : DefaultDispatcher-worker-1
async and await use case :
- When we have multiple tasks to do and they depend on other's completion,
async
andawait
would help. - For example, in below code, there are
2
suspend functions myMethod() and myMethod2().myMethod2()
should get executed only after full completion ofmyMethod()
ORmyMethod2()
depends on result ofmyMethod()
, we can useasync
andawait
async
starts a coroutine in parallel similar tolaunch
. But, it provides a way to wait for one coroutine before starting another coroutine in parallel.That way is
await()
.async
returns an instance ofDeffered<T>
.T
would beUnit
for default. When we need to wait for anyasync
's completion, we need to call.await()
onDeffered<T>
instance of thatasync
. Like in below example, we calledinnerAsync.await()
which implies that the execution would get suspended untilinnerAsync
gets completed. We can observe the same in output. TheinnerAsync
gets completed first, which callsmyMethod()
. And then nextasync
innerAsync2
starts, which callsmyMethod2()
override fun onCreate(savedInstanceState: Bundle?) { super.onCreate(savedInstanceState) setContentView(R.layout.main_activity) Log.i(TAG,"Outer code started on Thread : " + Thread.currentThread().name); job = GlobalScope.launch(Dispatchers.Default) { innerAsync = async { Log.d(TAG, "Inner code started on Thread : " + Thread.currentThread().name + " making outer code suspend"); myMethod(); } innerAsync.await() innerAsync2 = async { Log.w(TAG, "Inner code started on Thread : " + Thread.currentThread().name + " making outer code suspend"); myMethod2(); } } Log.i(TAG,"Outer code resumed on Thread : " + Thread.currentThread().name); } private suspend fun myMethod() { withContext(Dispatchers.Default) { for(i in 1..5) { Log.d(TAG,"Inner code i : $i on Thread : " + Thread.currentThread().name); } } } private suspend fun myMethod2() { withContext(Dispatchers.Default) { for(i in 1..10) { Log.w(TAG,"Inner code i : $i on Thread : " + Thread.currentThread().name); } } }
This outputs :
11814-11814/? I/TAG: Outer code started on Thread : main
11814-11814/? I/TAG: Outer code resumed on Thread : main
11814-11845/? D/TAG: Inner code started on Thread : DefaultDispatcher-worker-2 making outer code suspend
11814-11845/? D/TAG: Inner code i : 1 on Thread : DefaultDispatcher-worker-2
11814-11845/? D/TAG: Inner code i : 2 on Thread : DefaultDispatcher-worker-2
11814-11845/? D/TAG: Inner code i : 3 on Thread : DefaultDispatcher-worker-2
11814-11845/? D/TAG: Inner code i : 4 on Thread : DefaultDispatcher-worker-2
11814-11845/? D/TAG: Inner code i : 5 on Thread : DefaultDispatcher-worker-2
// ---- Due to await() call, innerAsync2 will start only after innerAsync gets completed
11814-11848/? W/TAG: Inner code started on Thread : DefaultDispatcher-worker-4 making outer code suspend
11814-11848/? W/TAG: Inner code i : 1 on Thread : DefaultDispatcher-worker-4
11814-11848/? W/TAG: Inner code i : 2 on Thread : DefaultDispatcher-worker-4
11814-11848/? W/TAG: Inner code i : 3 on Thread : DefaultDispatcher-worker-4
11814-11848/? W/TAG: Inner code i : 4 on Thread : DefaultDispatcher-worker-4
11814-11848/? W/TAG: Inner code i : 5 on Thread : DefaultDispatcher-worker-4
11814-11848/? W/TAG: Inner code i : 6 on Thread : DefaultDispatcher-worker-4
11814-11848/? W/TAG: Inner code i : 7 on Thread : DefaultDispatcher-worker-4
11814-11848/? W/TAG: Inner code i : 8 on Thread : DefaultDispatcher-worker-4
11814-11848/? W/TAG: Inner code i : 9 on Thread : DefaultDispatcher-worker-4
11814-11848/? W/TAG: Inner code i : 10 on Thread : DefaultDispatcher-worker-4
Solution 5:[5]
I've found that the best way to understand suspend
is to make an analogy between this
keyword and coroutineContext
property.
Kotlin functions can be declared as local or global. Local functions magically have access to this
keyword while global don't.
Kotlin functions can be declared as suspend
or blocking. suspend
functions magically have access to coroutineContext
property while blocking functions don't.
The thing is: coroutineContext
property
is declared like a "normal" property in Kotlin stdlib but this declaration is just a stub for documentation/navigation purposes. In fact coroutineContext
is builtin intrinsic property that means under the hood compiler magic aware of this property like it aware of language keywords.
What this
keyword does for local functions is what coroutineContext
property does for suspend
functions: it gives access to current context of execution.
So, you need suspend
to get an access to coroutineContext
property - the instance of currently executed coroutine context
Solution 6:[6]
I wanted to give you a simple example of the concept of continuation. This is what a suspend function does, it can freeze/suspend and then it continues/resumes. Stop thinking of coroutine in terms of threads and Semaphore. Think of it in terms of continuation and even callback hooks.
To be clear, a coroutine can be paused by using a suspend
function. lets investigate this:
In android we could do this for example :
var TAG = "myTAG:"
fun myMethod() { // function A in image
viewModelScope.launch(Dispatchers.Default) {
for (i in 10..15) {
if (i == 10) { //on first iteration, we will completely FREEZE this coroutine (just for loop here gets 'suspended`)
println("$TAG im a tired coroutine - let someone else print the numbers async. i'll suspend until your done")
freezePleaseIAmDoingHeavyWork()
} else
println("$TAG $i")
}
}
//this area is not suspended, you can continue doing work
}
suspend fun freezePleaseIAmDoingHeavyWork() { // function B in image
withContext(Dispatchers.Default) {
async {
//pretend this is a big network call
for (i in 1..10) {
println("$TAG $i")
delay(1_000)//delay pauses coroutine, NOT the thread. use Thread.sleep if you want to pause a thread.
}
println("$TAG phwww finished printing those numbers async now im tired, thank you for freezing, you may resume")
}
}
}
Above code prints the following :
I: myTAG: my coroutine is frozen but i can carry on to do other things
I: myTAG: im a tired coroutine - let someone else print the numbers async. i'll suspend until your done
I: myTAG: 1
I: myTAG: 2
I: myTAG: 3
I: myTAG: 4
I: myTAG: 5
I: myTAG: 6
I: myTAG: 7
I: myTAG: 8
I: myTAG: 9
I: myTAG: 10
I: myTAG: phwww finished printing those numbers async now im tired, thank you for freezing, you may resume
I: myTAG: 11
I: myTAG: 12
I: myTAG: 13
I: myTAG: 14
I: myTAG: 15
imagine it working like this:
So the current function you launched from does not stop, just a coroutine would suspend while it continues. The thread is not paused by running a suspend function.
I think this site can help you straight things out and is my reference.
Let's do something cool and freeze our suspend function in the middle of an iteration. We will resume it later in onResume
Store a variable called continuation
and we'll load it with the coroutines continuation object for us :
var continuation: CancellableContinuation<String>? = null
suspend fun freezeHere() = suspendCancellableCoroutine<String> {
continuation = it
}
fun unFreeze() {
continuation?.resume("im resuming") {}
}
Now, let's return to our suspended function and make it freeze in middle of iteration :
suspend fun freezePleaseIAmDoingHeavyWork() {
withContext(Dispatchers.Default) {
async {
//pretend this is a big network call
for (i in 1..10) {
println("$TAG $i")
delay(1_000)
if(i == 3)
freezeHere() //dead pause, do not go any further
}
}
}
}
Then somewhere else like in onResume (for example):
override fun onResume() {
super.onResume()
unFreeze()
}
And the loop will continue. Its pretty neat to know we can freeze a suspend function at any point and resume it after some time has beeb passed. You can also look into channels
Solution 7:[7]
Anyone still stumbling upon this question, I would recommend taking a quick look at this. I've read a lot of misleading answers to this question, even some top rated. This cleared a lot of doubts I had.
Solution 8:[8]
There are a lot of great answers here, but I think there are two additional things that are important to note.
launch / withContext / runBlocking and a lot of other things in the examples are from the coroutines library. which actually have nothing to do with suspend. you don't need the coroutines library to use coroutines. Coroutines are a compiler "trick". Yes, the library sure makes things easier, but the compiler is doing the magic of suspending & resuming things.
The second thing, is the compiler is just taking code that looks procedural and turning it into callbacks under the hood.
Take the following minimal coroutine that suspends that does not use the coroutine library :
lateinit var context: Continuation<Unit>
suspend {
val extra="extra"
println("before suspend $extra")
suspendCoroutine<Unit> { context = it }
println("after suspend $extra")
}.startCoroutine(
object : Continuation<Unit> {
override val context: CoroutineContext = EmptyCoroutineContext
// called when a coroutine ends. do nothing.
override fun resumeWith(result: Result<Unit>) {
result.onFailure { ex : Throwable -> throw ex }
}
}
)
println("kick it")
context.resume(Unit)
I think an important way to understand it is to look at what the compiler does with this code. effectively it creates a class for the lambda. it creates a property in the class for the "extra" string, then it creates two function, one that prints the "before" and another the prints the "after".
Effectively the compiler took what looks like procedural code and turned it into callbacks.
So what does the suspend
keyword do? It tell the compiler how far back to look for context that the generated callbacks will need. The compiler needs to know which variables are used in which "callbacks", and the suspend keyword helps it. In this example the "extra" variable is used both before and after the suspend. So it needs to be pulled out to a property of the class containing the callbacks the compiler makes.
It also tells the compiler that this is the "beginning" of state and to prepare to split up the following code into callbacks. The startCoroutine
only exists on suspend lambda.
The actual Java code generated by the Kotlin compiler is here. It's a switch statement instead of callbacks, but it's effectively the same thing. Called first w/ case 0, then w/ case 1 after the resume.
@Nullable
public final Object invokeSuspend(@NotNull Object $result) {
var10_2 = IntrinsicsKt.getCOROUTINE_SUSPENDED();
switch (this.label) {
case 0: {
ResultKt.throwOnFailure((Object)$result);
extra = "extra";
var3_4 = "before delay " + extra;
var4_9 = false;
System.out.println((Object)var3_4);
var3_5 = this;
var4_9 = false;
var5_10 = false;
this.L$0 = extra;
this.L$1 = var3_5;
this.label = 1;
var5_11 = var3_5;
var6_12 = false;
var7_13 = new SafeContinuation(IntrinsicsKt.intercepted((Continuation)var5_11));
it = (Continuation)var7_13;
$i$a$-suspendCoroutine-AppKt$main$1$1 = false;
this.$context.element = it;
v0 = var7_13.getOrThrow();
if (v0 == IntrinsicsKt.getCOROUTINE_SUSPENDED()) {
DebugProbesKt.probeCoroutineSuspended((Continuation)var3_5);
}
v1 = v0;
if (v0 == var10_2) {
return var10_2;
}
** GOTO lbl33
}
case 1: {
var3_6 = this.L$1;
extra = (String)this.L$0;
ResultKt.throwOnFailure((Object)$result);
v1 = $result;
lbl33:
// 2 sources
var3_8 = "after suspend " + extra;
var4_9 = false;
System.out.println((Object)var3_8);
return Unit.INSTANCE;
}
}
throw new IllegalStateException("call to 'resume' before 'invoke' with coroutine");
}
Solution 9:[9]
Let's say we have a function named myFunction.
fun myFunction(){
Code block 1
Code block 2 //this one has a long running operation
Code block 3
Code block 4
}
Usually these code blocks execute like block1, block2, block3, block4 . So code block 3 and 4 might execute while code block 2 is still running. Because of that reason there can be problems. (screen might freeze, app might crash)
But if we make this function suspend
suspend fun MyFunction(){
Code block 1
Code block 2 //this one has a long running operation
Code block 3
Code block 4
}
Now, this function can get paused when code block 2(long running operation) starts executing and get resumed when it is done. Code block 3 and 4 will execute after that. So there will be no unexpected thread sharing issues.
Solution 10:[10]
For anyone still wondering how do we actually suspend a suspend function, we use the suspendCoroutine function in the body of the suspend function .
suspend fun foo() :Int
{
Log.d(TAG,"Starting suspension")
return suspendCoroutine<Int> { num->
val result = bar()
Log.d(TAG,"Starting resumption")
num.resumeWith(Result.success(result))
}
}
fun bar():Int //this is a long runnning task
Sources
This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Overflow and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
Source: Stack Overflow
Solution | Source |
---|---|
Solution 1 | Dmitrii Leonov |
Solution 2 | |
Solution 3 | |
Solution 4 | Kushal |
Solution 5 | |
Solution 6 | |
Solution 7 | Miguel Lasa |
Solution 8 | JonasVautherin |
Solution 9 | |
Solution 10 | Muhammad Ahmed AbuTalib |