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Home/ Questions/Q 679963
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 14, 20262026-05-14T01:19:05+00:00 2026-05-14T01:19:05+00:00

In my script, I have a function foo which basically uses pynotify to notify

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In my script, I have a function foo which basically uses pynotify to notify user about something repeatedly after a time interval say 15 minutes.

def foo:
    while True:
        """Does something"""
        time.sleep(900)

My main script has to interact with user & does all other things so I just cant call the foo() function. directly.

Whats the better way of doing it and why?
Using fork or threads?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-14T01:19:06+00:00Added an answer on May 14, 2026 at 1:19 am

    I won’t tell you which one to use, but here are some of the advantages of each:

    Threads can start more quickly than processes, and threads use fewer operating system resources than processes, including memory, file handles, etc. Threads also give you the option of communicating through shared variables (although many would say this is more of a disadvantage than an advantage – See below).

    Processes each have their own separate memory and variables, which means that processes generally communicate by sending messages to each other. This is much easier to do correctly than having threads communicate via shared memory. Processes can also run truly concurrently, so that if you have multiple CPU cores, you can keep all of them busy using processes. In Python*, the global interpreter lock prevents threads from making much use of more than a single core.


    * – That is, CPython, which the implementation of Python that you get if you go to http://python.org and download Python. Other Python implementations (such as Jython) do not necessarily prohibit Python from running threads on multiple CPUs simultaneously. Thanks to @EOL for the clarification.

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