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What is the difference between Process and Thread

What is the difference between Process and Thread

To better understand this question, let’s first take a look at what is a Program. A Program is an executable file containing a set of instructions and passively stored on disk. One program can have multiple processes. For example, the Chrome browser creates a different process for every single tab.

A Process means a program is in execution. When a program is loaded into the memory and becomes active, the program becomes a process. The process requires some essential resources such as registers, program counter, and stack.

A Thread is the smallest unit of execution within a process.

The following process explains the relationship between program, process, and thread.

The program contains a set of instructions.

The program is loaded into memory. It becomes one or more running processes.

When a process starts, it is assigned memory and resources. A process can have one or more threads. For example, in the Microsoft Word app, a thread might be responsible for spelling checking and the other thread for inserting text into the doc.

Main differences between process and thread:

Processes are usually independent, while threads exist as subsets of a process.

Each process has its own memory space. Threads that belong to the same process share the same memory.

A process is a heavyweight operation. It takes more time to create and terminate.

Context switching is more expensive between processes.

Inter-thread communication is faster for threads.

Over to you:

Some programming languages support coroutine. What is the difference between coroutine and thread?

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