Book Image

Multithreading with C# Cookbook, Second Edition - Second Edition

By : Evgenii Agafonov
Book Image

Multithreading with C# Cookbook, Second Edition - Second Edition

By: Evgenii Agafonov

Overview of this book

Multi-core processors are synonymous with computing speed and power in today’s world, which is why multithreading has become a key concern for C# developers. Multithreaded code helps you create effective, scalable, and responsive applications. This is an easy-to-follow guide that will show you difficult programming problems in context. You will learn how to solve them with practical, hands-on, recipes. With these recipes, you’ll be able to start creating your own scalable and reliable multithreaded applications. Starting from learning what a thread is, we guide you through the basics and then move on to more advanced concepts such as task parallel libraries, C# asynchronous functions, and much more. Rewritten to the latest C# specification, C# 6, and updated with new and modern recipes to help you make the most of the hardware you have available, this book will help you push the boundaries of what you thought possible in C#.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
Multithreading with C# Cookbook Second Edition
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Making a thread wait


This recipe will show you how a program can wait for some computation in another thread to complete to use its result later in the code. It is not enough to use the Thread.Sleep method because we don't know the exact time the computation will take.

Getting ready

To work through this recipe, you will need Visual Studio 2015. There are no other prerequisites. The source code for this recipe can be found at BookSamples\Chapter1\Recipe3.

How to do it...

To understand how a program waits for some computation in another thread to complete in order to use its result later, perform the following steps:

  1. Start Visual Studio 2015. Create a new C# console application project.

  2. In the Program.cs file, add the following using directives:

    using System;
    using System.Threading;
    using static System.Console;
    using static System.Threading.Thread;
  3. Add the following code snippet below the Main method:

    static void PrintNumbersWithDelay()
    {
      WriteLine("Starting...");
      for (int i = 1; i < 10; i++)
      {
        Sleep(TimeSpan.FromSeconds(2));
        WriteLine(i);
      }
    }
  4. Add the following code snippet inside the Main method:

    WriteLine("Starting...");
    Thread t = new Thread(PrintNumbersWithDelay);
    t.Start();
    t.Join();
    WriteLine("Thread completed");
  5. Run the program.

How it works...

When the program is run, it runs a long-running thread that prints out numbers and waits two seconds before printing each number. But, in the main program, we called the t.Join method, which allows us to wait for the thread t to complete working. When it is complete, the main program continues to run. With the help of this technique, it is possible to synchronize execution steps between two threads. The first one waits until another one is complete and then continues to work. While the first thread waits, it is in a blocked state (as it is in the previous recipe when you call Thread.Sleep).