I have a method which does 2 independent pieces of logic. I was hoping I can run them both at the same time .. and only continue afterwards when both those child methods have completed.
I was trying to get my head around the async/await
syntax but I just don't get it.
Here's the code:
public PewPew SomeMethod(Foo foo)
{
var cats = GetAllTheCats(foo);
var food = GetAllTheFood(foo);
return new PewPew
{
Cats = cats,
Food = food
};
}
private IList<Cat> GetAllTheCats(Foo foo)
{
// Do stuff, like hit the Db, spin around, dance, jump, etc...
// It all takes some time.
return cats;
}
private IList<Food> GetAllTheFood(Foo foo)
{
// Do more stuff, like hit the Db, nom nom noms...
// It all takes some time.
return food;
}
So with that code above, I want to say : go and get all the cats and food at the same time. Once we're finished, then return a new PewPew
.
I'm confused because I'm not sure which classes above are async
or return a Task
, etc. All of em? just the two private ones? I'm also guessing I need to leverage the Task.WaitAll(tasks)
method, but I'm unsure how to setup the tasks to run at the same time.
Suggestions, kind folks?
Here is what you may want to do:
public async Task<PewPew> SomeMethod(Foo foo)
{
// get the stuff on another thread
var cTask = Task.Run(() => GetAllTheCats(foo));
var fTask = Task.Run(() => GetAllTheFood(foo));
var cats = await cTask;
var food = await fTask;
return new PewPew
{
Cats = cats,
Food = food
};
}
public IList<Cat> GetAllTheCats(Foo foo)
{
// Do stuff, like hit the Db, spin around, dance, jump, etc...
// It all takes some time.
return cats;
}
public IList<Food> GetAllTheFood(Foo foo)
{
// Do more stuff, like hit the Db, nom nom noms...
// It all takes some time.
return food;
}
There are two things you need to understand here:
1) What is diff between this:
var cats = await cTask;
var food = await fTask;
And this:
Task.WaitAll(new [] {cTask, fTask});
Both will give you similar result in the sense let the 2 async
tasks finish and then return new PewPew
- however, difference is that Task.WaitAll()
will block the current thread (if that is UI thread, then UI will freeze). instead, await
will break down the SomeMethod
say in a state machine, and return from the SomeMethod
to its caller as it encounters await
keyword. It will not block the thread. The Code below await
will be scheduled to run when async
task is over.
2) You could also do this:
var cats = await Task.Run(() => GetAllTheCats(foo));
var food = await Task.Run(() => GetAllTheFood(foo));
However, this will not start the async
tasks simultaneously. Second task will start after the first is over. This is because how the await
keyword works, hope that helps...
EDIT: How to use SomeMethod
- somewhere at the start of the call tree, you have to use Wait()
or Result
property - OR - you have to await
from async void
.
Generally, async void
would be an event handler:
public async void OnSomeEvent(object sender, EventArgs ez)
{
Foo f = GetFoo();
PewPew p = await SomeMethod(f);
}
If not then use Result
property.
public Foo2 NonAsyncNonVoidMethod()
{
Foo f = GetFoo();
PewPew p = SomeMethod(f).Result; //But be aware that Result will block thread
return GetFoo2(p);
}