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Full Discussion: What is your age? (Part 2)
The Lounge What is on Your Mind? What is your age? (Part 2) Post 302094701 by vino on Tuesday 31st of October 2006 05:47:49 AM
Old 10-31-2006
Quote:
Originally Posted by Perderabo
What is your age? poses an interesting question
I have to agree with Perderabo. The statistics are even more interesting.

Here is an interpretation.

There are two types of contributors/seekers.

I. Those that have started or starting their careers in the recent past i.e. 4-5 years.
II. Those who are already well set in their careers. The ones who saw it happening right from the beginning.

Cheers !
 

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iv_thread(3)						    ivykis programmer's manual						      iv_thread(3)

NAME
iv_thread_create, iv_thread_set_debug_state - ivykis thread convenience functions SYNOPSIS
#include <iv_thread.h> int iv_thread_create(char *name, void (*start_routine)(void *), void *arg); void iv_thread_set_debug_state(int state); DESCRIPTION
iv_thread_create is a wrapper around pthread_create(3) which will maintain an ivykis main loop reference in the calling thread (which must be an ivykis(3) thread, i.e. have had iv_init(3) called in it) for as long as the created thread is alive. Maintaining a reference on the calling thread's ivykis event loop makes sure that the calling thread will not return from its ivykis main loop before the created thread exits, as that could cause cleanup still happening in the created thread to be interrupted when the calling thread subsequently calls exit(3). The created thread need not be an ivykis thread. Enabling debugging by calling iv_thread_set_debug with a nonzero argument will print a debug message to standard error whenever a thread is created via iv_thread_create, whenever a thread so created terminates normally by returning from its start_routine, self-terminates by calling pthread_exit(3), or is successfully canceled by pthread_cancel(3), and whenever destruction of such a thread is signaled back to the calling thread. For inter-thread signaling, iv_thread uses iv_event(3). SEE ALSO
ivykis(3), iv_event(3), exit(3), pthread_cancel(3), pthread_create(3), pthread_exit(3) ivykis 2010-09-13 iv_thread(3)
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