-
Book Overview & Buying
-
Table Of Contents
Multithreading in C# 5.0 Cookbook
By :
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 Thread.Sleep because we don't know the exact time the computation will take.
To work through this recipe, you will need Visual Studio 2012. There are no other prerequisites. The source code for this recipe can be found at BookSamples\Chapter1\Recipe3.
To understand how a program can wait for some computation in another thread to complete to use its result later, perform the following steps:
Program.cs file, add the following using directives:using System; using System.Threading;
Main method:static void PrintNumbersWithDelay()
{
Console.WriteLine("Starting...");
for (int i = 1; i < 10; i++)
{
Thread.Sleep(TimeSpan.FromSeconds(2));
Console.WriteLine(i);
}
}Main method:Console.WriteLine("Starting...");
Thread t = new Thread(PrintNumbersWithDelay);
t.Start();
t.Join();
Console.WriteLine("Thread completed");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 thread t to complete. 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 is waiting, it is in a blocked state (as it is in the previous recipe when you call Thread.Sleep).
Change the font size
Change margin width
Change background colour