Book Image

C# Programming Cookbook

By : Dirk Strauss
Book Image

C# Programming Cookbook

By: Dirk Strauss

Overview of this book

During your application development workflow, there is always a moment when you need to get out of a tight spot. Through a recipe-based approach, this book will help you overcome common programming problems and get your applications ready to face the modern world. We start with C# 6, giving you hands-on experience with the new language features. Next, we work through the tasks that you perform on a daily basis such as working with strings, generics, and lots more. Gradually, we move on to more advanced topics such as the concept of object-oriented programming, asynchronous programming, reactive extensions, and code contracts. You will learn responsive high performance programming in C# and how to create applications with Azure. Next, we will review the choices available when choosing a source control solution. At the end of the book, we will show you how to create secure and robust code, and will help you ramp up your skills when using the new version of C# 6 and Visual Studio
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
C# Programming Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
Acknowledgements
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Catching errors in parallel foreach loops


With parallel foreach loops, developers can wrap the loop in a try catch statement. Care needs to be taken, however, because the Parallel.ForEach will throw AggregatedException, which has the exceptions it encounters over several threads rolled into one.

Getting ready

We will create a List<string> object that contains a collection of machine IP addresses. The Parallel.ForEach loop will check the IP addresses to see whether the machines on the other end of the given IP are alive. It does this by pinging the IP address. The method that performs the Parallel.ForEach loop will also be given the minimum required alive machines as an integer value. If the minimum number of machines alive is not met, an exception is thrown.

How to do it…

  1. In the Recipes class, add a method called CheckClientMachinesOnline() that takes as parameters a List<string> collection of IP addresses and an integer that specifies the minimum number of machines required to be...