pymel.core.general.threadCount

threadCount(*args, **kwargs)

This command sets the number of threads to be used by Maya in regions of code that are multithreaded. By default the number of threads is equal to the number of logical CPUs, not the number of physical CPUs. Logical CPUs are different from physical CPUs in the following ways:A physical CPU with hyperthreading counts as two logical CPUsA dual-core CPU counts as two logical CPUsWith some workloads, using one thread per logical CPU may not perform well. This is sometimes the case with hyperthreading. It is worth experimenting with different numbers of threads to see which gives the best performance. Note that having more threads can mean Maya uses more memory. Setting a value of zero means the number of threads used will equal the number of logical processors in the system. In query mode, return type is based on queried flag.

Flags:
Long name (short name) Argument Types Properties
numberOfThreads (n) int ../../../_images/create.gif ../../../_images/query.gif
 
Sets the number of threads to useFlag can appear in Create mode of commandFlag can have multiple arguments, passed either as a tuple or a list.

Derived from mel command maya.cmds.threadCount

Example:

import pymel.core as pm

import maya.cmds as cmds

# sets Maya to use 4 threads for multithreaded evaluation
pm.threadCount( n=4 )

# sets Maya to use one thread per logical CPU
pm.threadCount( n=0 )

# query number of threads currently set
pm.threadCount( q=True, n=True )
# Result: 8 #

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