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19:10
Any recommendations for a tutorial to read about Disposing/Finalizing objects? I keep on running across stuff that isn't written in good English and it's kind of driving me crazy :P
I recommend you read the sample on the IDisposable page and come to me us with questions.
:D It covers a lot of details that are left out of the MSDN docs
Thanks all.
it did - I just haven't been writing a lot for a while now
I may start writing about async, though
which will probably bring it higher again
lol
@Reed - For me, the most interesting aspects of async are 1: what situations are there where there is a significant benefit in using asynchronous approaches versus synchronous ones, and 2: what is a good design pattern for protecting against conflicts when using asynchronous approaches with objects which are not thread safe
19:17
1 is something I'm definitely going to cover
2 is tricky - in most cases, you shouldn't be doing anything that causes problems, unless you're writing libraries, in which case things get very specific to the objects in question
What about explaining when async isn't sufficient and parallelism is required?
@KendallFrey I'm actually planning to explain why that statement doesn't make sense ;)
that's a big part of the talk
What part of it doesn't make sense?
@Reed - Mostly for 2 I was thinking about something like a database context. Should each task have its own context? Should there be a shared context that all the tasks use? Would having a shared context possibly introduce race conditions for unique ids or for modification? When should a db context not be used asynchronously? When should a db context be used asynchronously?
No, it's the other way around.
19:21
@ton.yeung Yeah, effectively
async and parallelism are two separate concerns
so trying to say one isn't sufficient and you should move to the other is looking at the entire problem domain incorrectly
parallelism is a subset of async (mostly)
oops
gosh darn it
@Kendall - I think you need some coffee.
I play too much Minecraft
@Reed - What do you think about that aspect?
@ReedCopsey Doesn't the answer just come down to CPU vs async hardware?
19:24
@KendallFrey No - you can have async operations that are 100% run on one thread
async has nothing to do with concurrency
I know. That's what I'm getting at.
and technically, parallelism and async are two completely separate concerns
async does often suggest some form of concurrency, but not parallelism
(that's nitpicking, but still...)
well, want to focus on asynchrony more than anything else, but yeah, probably should talk about it
Database operations make for great use of fibres, and weather simulation makes for a good use of threads. Async generally translates to fibres, and parallelism to threads.
I can't think of any really good examples though :P
from a pure technical standpoint, you can't have parallelism without hardware support (ie: 2 cores), but you can have concurrency with a single thread
@ton.yeung lol
Related: Why in all hell would you need more threads than CPU cores? A: When threads are not all using CPU all the time.
@ReedCopsey So, you would say that simultaneous CPU/CPU is parallelism, but CPU/IO isn't?
Or maybe you would say that CPU/IO is 'hardware support'?
19:33
from a pure technical standpoint, parallelism requires hardware - for parallelism to exist, you have to have multiple pieces of work actually executing simultaneously
where concurrency just requires having multiple work items all "making forward progress"
so you can time slice, etc and still have concurrency, with only a single thread
IO bound work is the most common way to make that happen
Single thread time slicing is so foreign to me.
since you can basically drop your work off, and progress on, and wait until you get a signal from the OS
Well, yeah.
happens all of the time with UIs
Are you referring to pre-emptive time sharing on a single thread?
That seems... so wrong.
19:35
Single thread time slicing is how multitasking was first implemented. It was pretty ground breaking at the time.
pre-emptive or cooperative?
Now we kind of take it for granted.
I'm sure it can be done, but the concept of pre-emptively scheduled threads and cooperatively scheduled fibers is something I can't think outside of.
@KendallFrey You like being able to run multiple applications on your system, right?
;)
Sure, in separate threads.
If they all ran in one thread that would be weird.
19:37
You think you have a thread running for each application?
A process with one or more threads.
@KendallFrey How many cores do you have? I guarantee there are more processes running on your system than threads that can perform work right now...
right now
Yeah, but threads are swapped in and out of the CPUs.
@KendallFrey Which is time sharing on a single thread ;)
I wish C# had the ability to do this: stackoverflow.com/questions/18496754/…
You seem to be talking about some kind of hardware thread. I'm talking about OS threads. Correct?
19:43
@ReedCopsey i would be happy if i understood that
at the end of the day, and "OS thread" is just an abstraction
I know.
But it's a darn good one.
I'm a bluepill in regards to that.
@Reed - It seems like that should be possible. Can't you accept an object byref inside of a method in c#? Or do you meant just the shorthand style of that?
Problem?
@TravisJ This is for variables closed over in lambdas
in C++, you can specifically state "close over a by reference, and b by value"
in C#, closures are all magic handled by the compiler for you - you have no control over it
(it's effectively always by reference)
19:47
@Reed - Ah. Yes variables closed over by lambdas are considered an anti pattern in c#. It is an easy way to mismatch data.
A multiprocessor cpu can have as many processes running as it likes. Each process has a set of threads. Each thread can have a set of tasks. All of these are run in the "forward progress" time slicing approach as Reed said earlier. In order to be able to bypass the time slicing and take advantage of asynchronous behavior, you must actually have a process with multiple cores so that two threads can be executed at the same time. Does that sound right?
@TravisJ I wouldn't call that an anti pattern - it's used almost everywhere
@TravisJ No - you can take advantage of asynchrony without multiple threads
@ReedCopsey "by value" meaning "by it's value at the time of execution" i.e. no more bugs with lambdas in loops?
asynchrony can be very useful on a single thread
@KendallFrey No - by value in that you can't modify the original - you're getting a copy of the variable
ie: in C#, lambda's effectively write a method with behavior similar to void Foo(ref int i)
in C++, you can say that you want it to be void Foo(int i) instead
Yeah, that makes sense, but when is that value read? When the lambda is created, or when it is run?
"at the time of execution" was a horrible choice of words
I meant "when execution is at the point where the code appears"
@Reed - So one thread with two tasks? Wouldn't that still include having multi core available?
19:52
@ReedCopsey Case in point: Node.js. Fast, asynchronous, and single threaded.
@TravisJ No.
need an example?
in C#?
A(); Task b = B(); C(); await b; // B and C run asynchronously, but on the same thread. (B is async)
@Kendall - So the processor is going to allocate partial processing to different tasks so they can be asynchronous?
Not really.
Let me flesh it out a bit.
@KendallFrey Depends on how B() is implemented, in that case
19:57
Let's say B reads a file. It will fire off a request for the file to the hard disk. It will then return a Task. C commences. Let's say at some point during C's execution, the file returns from disk. However, the thread is busy doing C, so B waits to continue until C is done.
@ReedCopsey I'm assuming typical code.
@Kendall - For B and C to run async doesn't that require multi core? How else would there be a processor available for B and a processor available for C.
> B waits to continue until C is done.
I was under the impression that async implies both processes are concurrently executing. Is that not the case?
Where "continue" means "process the file"
@TravisJ Not necessarily. (It could be though)
For the yes case, is that only possible with multi core? If not, then how is a single processor utilized in order to process both at once?
19:59
@ton.yeung What chapter is that menu item on?
I'm going to assume hyperthreading isn't an appropriate answer to your question.
I am fine with weighted terms as answers
Gui
Gui
hey guys what you're talking about?
If there are multiple threads running, then there can be multiple processors executing them in parallel.
@Gui - Scroll up :)
20:00
There doesn't have to be though.
Thank you good sir.
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@TravisJ please sum up in one sentence
@Gui - The differences and correlations between asynchronous, multithreaded, and concurrent behaviors.
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interesting subject
@Kendall - So basically there are virtual cores in a single core processor?
20:02
@TravisJ There's basically two modes: Single-threaded async, in which there is no parallelism whatsoever, and multithreaded, which behaves like ordinary multithreading.
@TravisJ Yes.
Gui
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cool
I haven't really figured out why, because it's not parallelized properly.
@TravisJ Here's an example for you...
@Kendall - Are there approaches which will not take advantage of multi threading but still seem to be async?
If you make a default Windows Forms Application
and replace the code behind for Form1 with this:
using System;
using System.Threading.Tasks;
using System.Windows.Forms;

namespace WindowsFormsApplication2
{
    public partial class Form1 : Form
    {
        private Button button;
        private Button button2;
        public Form1()
        {
            InitializeComponent();
            button = new Button
                                {
                                    Text = "Click me to start",
                                    Width = 200
                                };
            button2 = new Button
2
Then run
20:04
@TravisJ By default, async/await are not multithreaded.
this is fully async, but only ever uses one thread
the first button's click event handler asynchronously waits for the second one to be clicked
Gui
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yeah, if you want async/await to be multithreaded, you have to call ConfigureAwait(false)
Processing.. I only have one processor available :P
but nothing is ever done on any thread except the main UI thread, and no other threads are ever created
Gui
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when you make a call to HttpClient.GetAsync() from UI, are you sure there're only one thread involved ?
I've heard about a thread pool which is used at the OS level
which will call back the message pump
when the download is completed
20:06
@Gui There's only one thread used
but
when the async operation is done, an IO event is signaled
@Reed - That is a good example.
and a threadpool IO thread is used for a very short period of time to notify
What is this TCS you speak of? A way to create a Task with no actual task to perform?
@TravisJ Yeah - wanted to whip up something
@KendallFrey TaskCompletionSource<T> is a way to make a Task manually
And Y U USE WINFORMS GAAAAH
20:07
^
it's the main way to wrap the Event Async Pattern up into the Task Async Pattern
@KendallFrey I only did it in Win Forms because it's a pain to create controls in WPF, and I wanted to creat ethe entire thing in code, so no designer changes were required ;)
that's easy in winforms
@Reed - What I have had issues with is sharing a context across multiple tasks which operate concurrently.
that's more of a threading concern than an async concern, thoguh
it sounds like you're doing Task parallelism
Can you elaborate a little please?
if you're using EF, the context isn't thread safe
20:10
correct
so any time you use it from threads, you need separate contexts
but that really isn't an issue with asynchrony as much as a general thread safety issue
okay, that is what I thought. So I would need to make a new context per task
@ton.yeung Yeah - I've written and talked about it a lot - I use it all the time ;)
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@ReedCopsey please advice what is the best resource to learn TPL, I wanna know all its secrets
Basically I am wiring up a task per iteration in a loop and just wanting it to finish whenever. And at the end of the loop, I wait for all of them and then return. So is that not asynchronous behavior?
Experience is the best teacher.
;)
that being said, Stephen Toub's blog is awesome
@TravisJ Not really, if you're waiting for it to return.
It's parallelism.
Gui
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20:12
thanks for links guys, all added to my "To do read" list
@Kendall - If I do not wait, then wont it stop the tasks in the middle of their operation?
They will lose scope
Why would it?
Oh
So keep a reference...
@TravisJ They won't stop
HAMMERTIME!
you don't need a reference
20:13
lol
the delegate itself keeps everything alive
Gui
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@TravisJ why not add each task in your loop into a list, then after the loop, you use Task.WhenAny
@Reed - Hm. So if I create and run a task and then return before it is done, it will still complete its work?
Gui
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20:14
this will looks more asynchronous
I can't even think of a good use for Task.WhenAny
@TravisJ Yes
@KendallFrey creating your own Timeouts ;)
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@KendallFrey I'm calling one hundred webservice, I wanna do something as soon as one request is downloaded to process the data
in this case, whenAny, is awsome
@KendallFrey if you want to write a method that takes a task without a timeout, and adds a timeout feature, you can use Task.Delay and the original task with Task.WhenAny to create timeouts
@ReedCopsey I knew you'd oblige
@ReedCopsey Yeah, yeah, I got that.
20:16
@Gui don't forget cancellation tokens
@Gui that's a great one, too - you can update UI items as tasks return
Gui
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@ReedCopsey exactely
that is just its name. onehundred.com
@ton.yeung lol - the original language team's Netflix sample was like that
I had a case where I was making a bunch of Azure REST API calls to find one piece of data, and then abort the requests when it was found
20:17
it called a web request for each movie on the list
yeah, I always hated that sample
@ReedCopsey You wouldn't by chance have GPGPU experience would you? I want to write something using that ultimate parallelism, but I have run into nothing but problems.
Gui
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whats gpgpu ?
@NinjaEcho search for gpgpu
General-purpose computing on graphics processing units (General-purpose graphics processing unit, GPGPU, GPGP or less often GP²U) is the utilization of a graphics processing unit (GPU), which typically handles computation only for computer graphics, to perform computation in applications traditionally handled by the central processing unit (CPU). Any GPU providing a functionally complete set of operations performed on arbitrary bits can compute any computable value. Additionally, the use of multiple graphics cards in one computer, or large numbers of graphics chips, further parallelizes...
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20:19
omgg, that looks awsome
It does.
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I always wondered how to do it
that's how I bitcoin mined
I was imagining ponies and unicorns and realtime Mandelbrot set viewers...
@KendallFrey little bit, but not a ton
20:21
love it, graphics for years piggy backed off CPU/RAM now they have their own GPU/RAM and now the CPU is borrowing from the GPU
what did I ring?
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hey guys, isn't there any framework to do GPGPU easily with .NET ?
@Gui I wish.
there are a couple
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20:22
@KendallFrey It would be awsome to do "Task.Run( () => DoWork, Mode.GPU)"
:D
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@ton.yeung sorry, I don't wanna be rich too soon
:)
One bitcoin mining program that used CUDA or OpenCL seemed finicky as shit, requiring me to downgrade to a specific graphics driver version
F# for C# developers has a full CUDA from F# sample that's pretty awesome, too
20:24
@Mike Downgrade? Hmm...
@Mike yeah - that's the problem with the GPGPU options right now
C++AMP is awesome for that
that's part of why I haven't used GPGPU in my software at work (yet)
but we're looking into using C++AMP
@KendallFrey it's very driver specific
@Mike Could that be why my attempt didn't work?
Gui
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:D
@ton.yeung Then you'll have a one in two chance to be either a whore, drug addict, or both.
sarcasm ...
20:28
^
I get the feeling that most people are too lazy to actually use the real sarcasm font.
Yeah, when the Wiki is updated I'll use it.
Is there any way to show a modal dialog, but return immediately?
I want to show a progress dialog, and I'd prefer it to be modal.
(Don't tell me to use Tasks :P)
@ton - Updated.
@Greg - wiki updated
It is the last list item under message formatting
20:33
Where "last" means "fourth last"
Wait, what?
That was confusing
Never mind me.
Travis just doesn't know how to put good headings together.
you did
`*real*` instead of *`real`*
@Kendall - It is styled after SO. What type of headline would you rather see that is available in an SO answer?
@TravisJ Aw, fuck...
I thought you would appreciate that.
@KendallFrey Modal and "return immediately" are opposite goals
20:36
@TravisJ Bold text, maybe.
do you just want it to be topmost?
has anyone use OX.Copyable before fro cloning?
@Kendall Instead of the italics?
@ReedCopsey I don't want the user to be able to interact with the main form.
@TravisJ Yes.
its a good look for me
20:38
@ReedCopsey But I do need code to continue with its task
@KendallFrey Normally, it's better to just disable the main window, create the new one, and set it's owner - but not try to make it "modal"
@Kendall Better?
@TravisJ A lil bit
That link threw me off.
All your images are belong to autofilter.
20:41
Such a prude
lol
If I were at home it wouldn't matter
I am both at home and at work.
yar har har
If I set the TabIndex for some controls on a webpage, do I need to set a TabIndex for all of them? What I really need is a way to change the tab order of a certain group of controls that are all together.
I mean, if I don't set the tab index for all the controls, then the ones unset will come after the set ones, right?
In the order they are rendered
@ton.yeung Eventually, these jabs are going to start hurting my feelings.
I can't flag the truth, though.
Which do you hate the least: INotifyPropertyChanged on a Window and controls bound to it, or properties on the Window that get/set properties of the controls?
Now I'm just jabbing myself.
20:50
@KendallFrey both are pretty bad - why are you binding to properties on the Window itself?
I'm too lazy to make a new class.
the second, but done via Dependency Properties, is probably the least objectionable
(but that's more work than a custom class in most cases)
How would you do that with DPs?
get { return Label1.Text; }
make a new DP, ie: "FooText"
and setup a binding to Label1.Text to your DP
so that the outside world can bind it correctly
@ton.yeung good idea, i have only 2 more days until im married. i think a night of portal2 will make me feel better
20:54
The shitty solution will not degrade the quality of this code.
Therefore, I choose the shitty solution.
I confirm this statement ^
I even know what the WOW means.
As for the 32/64 thing, I HAVE NO FUCKING CLUE
@ReedCopsey love that
they need a discussion with the guy who wrote the part of windows that determines which folder to open by default when i open a new 'open file dialog'

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