last day (16 days later) » 

14:29
1
A: Can I keep worker and GUI separate without cross thread exceptions?

JimiThe Threading part is not an issue here. You just need to handle the Form creation in a slightly different way: The Form's Handle creation can be forced calling CreateHandle() right after InitializeComponent() (the .Net Source code related to the method call is more interesting, also note the...

Alas, it works! Thank you for the explanation of what was happening, I have a better understanding. Just one thing- this program is launched with an option to start a GUI or to not start a GUI, and that is for the lifetime of the program, not a tradeoff depending on whether or not the dialog window is open. If it is launched with a GUI, I don't want a single "Test" to not make it to the dialog window (in reality it's not "Test" being appended to the TextBox, it is lines from a log file). That is why I wanted the dialog to be persistent; I need to be able to modify its contents while not shown.
I even went so far as to start experimenting with a ConcurrentQueue<string> which the worker thread could add the lines to and the dialog could take lines out when being loaded, but that seems so... dumb... Is there absolutely no way to modify a Control while it's not Visible?
See the edit: I changed Gui's CanWrite property to only check for the Handle creation. Now, if you create Gui, then Worker will test gui.CanWrite. Since you created a Gui object, it's already created DialogForm, which already created its Handle. The TextBox Control, even if not visible, will cache the lines value you set. If Gui is not created, the Worker will find it null and will write to the Console. You have to make all the changes shown here for it to work.
I applied your edit suggestions. But on my computer, every time the dialog form is closed, its window handle seems to be destroyed since CanWrite will be false when the dialog window is closed, and if (this.IsDisposed || !this.IsHandleCreated) return; would also discard any line that would make it there, while when I have it open the lines are appended as expected.
In other words, IsHandleCreated returns false when the dialog window is closed, and when it's shown again IsHandleCreated returns true. So if I force it to append lines while IsHandleCreated returns false, I get "Invoke or BeginInvoke cannot be called on a control until the window handle has been created." So it seems to me like I am not able to cache line values.
Ah, right. The instance of Gui may not receive an updated information on that (but you shouldn't have an exception when BeginInvoke is called, since the handle has already been recreated at that point). I'll make a change. Anyway, what version of the framework are you using to test this? 4.0 or 2.0?
I get all lines discarded while the dialog window is closed if I change the condition check in DialogForm.AddLine to if (this.IsDisposed || !this.IsHandleCreated) { Console.WriteLine("Line was thrown away:" + line); return; }
.NET Framework 4.0.3
14:29
All right. I'll give it a look and I'll let you know.
Thanks for your help, I appreciate it. This has been giving me a headache for a week
15:02
As mentioned, the only problem is that Gui is called from the worker thread, so it's not actually allowed to consistently test properties of an object that runs in another thread. I'll have to change that.
15:47
I've changed the Gui class and the DialogForm class to cache lines of text in a StringBuilder object when DialogForm is closed. I'm not exactly happy with this, but there are some complications when the Handle of a Form is checked from a secondary Thread. I can rebuild it, but the Gui class won't be informed correctly when this happens. It works, but I'll see to find another solution later.
 
1 hour later…
16:58
All right, now it's more like it: I've changed Gui, DialogForm and Mainform to handle both cases. I left there the StringBuilder object as a safety measure, in case the Handle of DialogForm is not available at some point. I've tested it and it never happened, but better safe than sorry.
Read the note in case you want to modify Worker and Gui to write to the console only when DialogForm is not visible. As it's now, when Gui is created (not null), the output will always go to the TextBox (which also acts as first-chance cache, the StringBuilder being the safety cache).
17:30
I've updated the notes. See whether it's all understandable.

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