Spawn

is a monadic operator which applies its operand in a new green thread. Rather that returning the result of its operand, Spawn returns a shy thread number. This operator is specific to Dyalog APL.

Usage
Spawn is used to run background tasks, for example for monitoring or handling incoming requests. Since the thread number is returned,  ("Thread Synchronise") is provided to retrieve the result, given the thread number. If the result is ready before  is used, it prints to the session if applicable.

Spawn is often used in conjunction with the Each operator to launch multiple threads in parallel.

As Spawn is an operator, it cannot be directly used with a niladic function, since a niladic function is called immediately when its name is referenced. As a workaround, the niladic function can be wrapped in a dfn and called with a dummy argument:

Examples
The effect of running code in the background can be observed when a measurable amount of time elapses. In the first expression below, get the current time (in milliseconds) and then delay for each of 1, 2, and 3 seconds, eventually computing the elapsed time, which is slightly more than 1+2+3 seconds (6000 milliseconds). In the second expression, the delaying threads are launched, but we don't await their completion before computing the elapsed time. In the final expression, we synchronise the parallel running delays, giving us a total elapsed time only slightly longer than the longest delay.

Lessons

 * APL Cultivation

Documentation

 * Dyalog