Video Training → Design+Code - SwiftUI Concurrency
Published by: voska89 on 28-07-2021, 04:20 | 0
Stephanie Diep | Duration: 3h 00m | Video: H264 3456x2160 | Audio: AAC 48 kHz 2ch | 1,73 GB | Language: English
Concurrency, swipe actions, search feature, AttributedStrings and accessibility were concepts discussed at WWDC21. This course explores all these topics, in addition to data hosting in Contentful and data fetching using Apollo GraphQL
If you've watched any of the WWDC21 sessions, you've heard about Concurrency. It's the new hot topic in Swift 5.5. Many features were also added to Swift and SwiftUI to deal with concurrent code. This course will introduce you to concurrency, and we'll learn how to turn old functions that used completion handlers into async/await functions. We'll also discover some other new exciting features that were added to SwiftUI 3.0!
Video Training → Manning - C Plus Plus Concurrency in Action Second Edition
Published by: Minhchick on 17-07-2021, 17:16 | 0
Manning - C Plus Plus Concurrency in Action Second Edition Proper-iLLiTERATE
English | Size: 3.64 GB
Category: C++
You choose C++ when your applications need to run fast. Well-designed concurrency makes them go even faster.
Video Training → RealPython - Speed Up Python With Concurrency
Published by: voska89 on 12-07-2021, 11:34 | 0
MP4 | Video: h264, 1920x1080 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz, 2 Ch
Genre: eLearning | Language: English | Duration: 9 Lessons (1h 12m) | Size: 183.8 MB
Concurrency is the act of having your computer do multiple things at the same time. If you've heard lots of talk about asyncio being added to Python but are curious how it compares to other concurrency methods or are wondering what concurrency is and how it might speed up your program, you've come to the right place.
Video Training → JavaSpecialists Java Concurrency Specialist Course
Published by: Minhchick on 16-06-2021, 19:27 | 0
JavaSpecialists Java Concurrency Specialist Course TUTORiAL-SOFTiMAGE
English | Size: 3.40 GB
Category: Java
Java was built to be able to do many things at once. In computer lingo, we call this "concurrency". This is the main reason why Java is so useful.