waiting

waiting

Python Software Foundation
+
+

Related Products

  • BrandMap® 10
    Visit Website
  • DbVisualizer
    557 Ratings
    Visit Website
  • Highcharts
    123 Ratings
    Visit Website
  • JOpt.TourOptimizer
    10 Ratings
    Visit Website
  • TrustInSoft Analyzer
    6 Ratings
    Visit Website
  • DXcharts
    28 Ratings
    Visit Website
  • B2i
    2 Ratings
    Visit Website
  • Harmoni
    16 Ratings
    Visit Website
  • Grafana Cloud
    644 Ratings
    Visit Website
  • Fraud.net
    56 Ratings
    Visit Website

About

ggplot2 is a system for declaratively creating graphics, based on The Grammar of Graphics. You provide the data, tell ggplot2 how to map variables to aesthetics, what graphical primitives to use, and it takes care of the details. ggplot2 is now over 10 years old and is used by hundreds of thousands of people to make millions of plots. That means, by-and-large, ggplot2 itself changes relatively little. When we do make changes, they will be generally to add new functions or arguments rather than changing the behavior of existing functions, and if we do make changes to existing behavior we will do them for compelling reasons. If you are new to ggplot2 you are better off starting with a systematic introduction, rather than trying to learn from reading individual documentation pages.

About

waiting is a small library for waiting for stuff to happen. It basically waits for a function to return True, in various modes. Waiting is compatible with flux for simulated timelines. The most basic usage is when you have a function you want to wait for. Waiting forever is very simple. If your predicate returns a value, it will be returned as the result of wait(). A timeout parameter can also be specified. When a timeout expires without the predicate being fulfilled, an exception is thrown. Sleeping polls the predicate at a certain interval (by default 1 second). The interval can be changed with the sleep_seconds argument. When waiting for multiple predicates, waiting provides two simple facilities to help aggregate them, any and all. They resemble Python’s built-in any() and all(), except that they don’t call a predicate once it has been satisfied (this is useful when the predicates are inefficient and take time to complete).

Platforms Supported

Windows
Mac
Linux
Cloud
On-Premises
iPhone
iPad
Android
Chromebook

Platforms Supported

Windows
Mac
Linux
Cloud
On-Premises
iPhone
iPad
Android
Chromebook

Audience

Developers searching for a powerful Component Libraries solution

Audience

Anyone seeking a solution to manage waiting times for a function to return True, in various modes

Support

Phone Support
24/7 Live Support
Online

Support

Phone Support
24/7 Live Support
Online

API

Offers API

API

Offers API

Screenshots and Videos

Screenshots and Videos

Pricing

No information available.
Free Version
Free Trial

Pricing

Free
Free Version
Free Trial

Reviews/Ratings

Overall 0.0 / 5
ease 0.0 / 5
features 0.0 / 5
design 0.0 / 5
support 0.0 / 5

This software hasn't been reviewed yet. Be the first to provide a review:

Review this Software

Reviews/Ratings

Overall 0.0 / 5
ease 0.0 / 5
features 0.0 / 5
design 0.0 / 5
support 0.0 / 5

This software hasn't been reviewed yet. Be the first to provide a review:

Review this Software

Training

Documentation
Webinars
Live Online
In Person

Training

Documentation
Webinars
Live Online
In Person

Company Information

ggplot2
ggplot2.tidyverse.org

Company Information

Python Software Foundation
United States
pypi.org/project/waiting/

Alternatives

Alternatives

Orange

Orange

University of Ljubljana
SanCCS

SanCCS

SAN Softwares

Categories

Categories

Integrations

Flux
Python
R

Integrations

Flux
Python
R
Claim ggplot2 and update features and information
Claim ggplot2 and update features and information
Claim waiting and update features and information
Claim waiting and update features and information