I mean that emacsclient is sort of rendering thread while Emacs server is sort of hard working part.
I have honestly never looked at the code for server/client so I don't know how separation is done. I ment it more as a logical view of those.It would be interesting to learn more about it though if some dev who is introduced in internals could
a line or two and explain how responsibility is divided between the two.
Skickat från min Samsung Galaxy-smartphone.
-------- Originalmeddelande --------
Från: HaiJun Zhang <netjune@outlook.com>
Datum: 2020-01-03 02:49 (GMT+01:00)
Till: Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org>, Michael Albinus <michael.albinus@gmx.de>, arthur miller <arthur.miller@live.com>
Kopia: 38807@debbugs.gnu.org
Ämne: RE: bug#38807: [Feature request]: Support lisp workers like web workers.
在 2020年1月1日 +0800 PM10:52,arthur miller <arthur.miller@live.com>,写道:
> We can even keep all in emacs currently as
> the “UI thread”and run another lisp machine > for a worker.
Isn’t emasc-server/emacsclient already already that?
Yes and no. The emacsclient do too less work to be a worker. Ratio of their work is 10:1? I would it to be 1:10? Workers should do most heavy work.