i.e. fire all the instances at the same time?

So long as you realise that unless you have 'n' processors, your 'n' instances will not al be running "at the same time".

And, just so the "other option" doesn't go unmentioned. If you were thinking "put it in a subroutine and call it that many number of times" looked vaguely like this:

sub doit { .... } doit( $args[ $_ ] ) for 0 .. $n-1;

Then

use threads; sub doit { ... } my @threads = map{ threads->new( \&doit, $args[ $_ ] ) } 0 .. $n - 1; $_->join for @threads;

is about a simple as multi-tasking gets.


Examine what is said, not who speaks.
Silence betokens consent.
Love the truth but pardon error.

In reply to Re: Multitasking in Perl by BrowserUk
in thread Multitasking in Perl by Nesh

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