# Request-Reply Semantics The pattern of sending a message and receiving a response is encapsulated in most client libraries into a request method. Under the covers this method will publish a message with a unique reply-to subject and wait for the response before returning. In the older versions of some libraries a completely new reply-to subject is created each time. In newer versions, a subject hierarchy is used so that a single subscriber in the client library listens for a wildcard, and requests are sent with a unique child subject of a single subject. The primary difference between the request method and publishing with a reply-to is that the library is only going to accept one response, and in most libraries the request will be treated as a synchronous action. The library may even provide a way to set the timeout. For example, updating the previous publish example we may request `time` with a one second timeout: !INCLUDE "../../\_examples/request\_reply.html" You can think of request-reply in the library as a subscribe, get one message, unsubscribe pattern. In Go this might look something like: ```go sub, err := nc.SubscribeSync(replyTo) if err != nil { log.Fatal(err) } nc.Flush() // Send the request nc.PublishRequest(subject, replyTo, []byte(input)) // Wait for a single response for { msg, err := sub.NextMsg(1 * time.Second) if err != nil { log.Fatal(err) } response = string(msg.Data) break } sub.Unsubscribe() ``` ## Scatter-Gather You can expand the request-reply pattern into something often called scatter-gather. To receive multiple messages, with a timeout, you could do something like the following, where the loop getting messages is using time as the limitation, not the receipt of a single message: ```go sub, err := nc.SubscribeSync(replyTo) if err != nil { log.Fatal(err) } nc.Flush() // Send the request nc.PublishRequest(subject, replyTo, []byte(input)) // Wait for a single response max := 100 * time.Millisecond start := time.Now() for time.Now().Sub(start) < max { msg, err := sub.NextMsg(1 * time.Second) if err != nil { break } responses = append(responses, string(msg.Data)) } sub.Unsubscribe() ``` Or, you can loop on a counter and a timeout to try to get _at least N_ responses: ```go sub, err := nc.SubscribeSync(replyTo) if err != nil { log.Fatal(err) } nc.Flush() // Send the request nc.PublishRequest(subject, replyTo, []byte(input)) // Wait for a single response max := 500 * time.Millisecond start := time.Now() for time.Now().Sub(start) < max { msg, err := sub.NextMsg(1 * time.Second) if err != nil { break } responses = append(responses, string(msg.Data)) if len(responses) >= minResponses { break } } sub.Unsubscribe() ```