With the asyncio library I\'ve seen,
@asyncio.coroutine
def function():
...
and
async def function():
Yes, there are functional differences between native coroutines using async def syntax and generator-based coroutines using the asyncio.coroutine decorator.
According to PEP 492, which introduces the async def syntax:
Native coroutine objects do not implement
__iter__and__next__methods. Therefore, they cannot be iterated over or passed toiter(),list(),tuple()and other built-ins. They also cannot be used in afor..inloop.An attempt to use
__iter__or__next__on a native coroutine object will result in a TypeError .Plain generators cannot
yield fromnative coroutines: doing so will result in a TypeError .generator-based coroutines (for asyncio code must be decorated with
@asyncio.coroutine) canyield fromnative coroutine objects.
inspect.isgenerator()andinspect.isgeneratorfunction()returnFalsefor native coroutine objects and native coroutine functions.
Point 1 above means that while coroutine functions defined using the @asyncio.coroutine decorator syntax can behave as traditional generator functions, those defined with the async def syntax cannot.
Here are two minimal, ostensibly equivalent coroutine functions defined with the two syntaxes:
import asyncio
@asyncio.coroutine
def decorated(x):
yield from x
async def native(x):
await x
Although the bytecode for these two functions is almost identical:
>>> import dis
>>> dis.dis(decorated)
5 0 LOAD_FAST 0 (x)
3 GET_YIELD_FROM_ITER
4 LOAD_CONST 0 (None)
7 YIELD_FROM
8 POP_TOP
9 LOAD_CONST 0 (None)
12 RETURN_VALUE
>>> dis.dis(native)
8 0 LOAD_FAST 0 (x)
3 GET_AWAITABLE
4 LOAD_CONST 0 (None)
7 YIELD_FROM
8 POP_TOP
9 LOAD_CONST 0 (None)
12 RETURN_VALUE
... the only difference being GET_YIELD_FROM_ITER vs GET_AWAITABLE, they behave completely differently when an attempt is made to iterate over the objects they return:
>>> list(decorated('foo'))
['f', 'o', 'o']
>>> list(native('foo'))
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "", line 1, in
TypeError: 'coroutine' object is not iterable
Obviously 'foo' is not an awaitable, so the attempt to call native() with it doesn't make much sense, but the point is hopefully clear that the coroutine object it returns is not iterable, regardless of its argument.
A more detailed investigation of the async/await syntax by Brett Cannon: How the heck does async/await work in Python 3.5? covers this difference in more depth.