calling an async function in C# that does not do an async call will still run on the caller's thread, so if you have a long running cpu operation, you will still freeze the caller's thread
Visual Studio was telling me "cannot run when setup is in process" any time I tried opening it and I thought I had a damn virus again, which I would've had no idea where it came from
@EdGzi You need to store it somewhere - you can write it to the disk, you can write it in a database, you can probably store it in other places, too. However, by default, there is no way to save the value without something external to the application itself.
@mr5 Yes, so I have a thread X for something and then need to run something async on thread Y
Does calling an async method mean it's actually asynchronous? Sorry for the n00b question. In other words is await DoFooAsync() make it run on its own thread?
@Alex no. Iirc, it needs to be in Task. async void would still execute on the same thread.
eh correction. Just had some tests. Marking the return type with Task or attaching with async does not guarantee it will run on a different thread.
To force it to run on a different thread, one could do Task.Run, Task.Factory.StartNew(), or await Task.Yield(); // next line is guaranteed to be async
You've got to be really careful with things like "a different thread". What do you mean by that? Do you mean it will run concurrently, will it run in parallel, or will it block your current task?
My understanding is that if you have very heavy async/await usage and you have a lot of I/O your app could technically be running on a single thread at a time because it only creates threads when it has work to do
Concurrent means both things progress at the same time. Parallel means they actually do CPU work at the same time.
Async/Await is, to my understanding, primarily for the first one. It lets you go away and do other things while your I/O tasks are stuck waiting on I/O.
@Alex that still remains a mystery to me. I have encountered this scenario, specifically on Xamarin.Android:
async void OnCreate(...)
{
// On UI thread
var permissionResult = await permissionService.Request(...)
}
async void OnPermissionResult(data)
{
// On UI thread
// will invoke once the user taps the dialog prompt
permissionService.SetResult(data)
}
On OnCreate(), it did not freeze the UI thread while waiting for permissionService.Request()
@ThomasBoby I do often not care how it's going to be prioritize by the thread pool, as long as it's not going to block the main thread where the UI is residing.
In my understanding, the main thread is not included in the thread pool.
I think that is basically up to the application framework. E.g. Xamarin.Android, WPF, .NET's "Host" all have something that is handling all the UI events and enabling async. I find it very difficult to understand async because I've never found an article explaining that part.
With the Host pattern, the "Main Thread" in debugger doesn't seem to do anything at all, it just waits for the application to end
basically, you can drink your coffee and finish your conversation concurrently taking a sip of coffee saying a few words taking a sip of coffee saying more words ...
and you can walk and have a conversation in parallel you can take steps and talk at the same time
And once you've got several async processes running, there's no longer any real distinction between them right? The threadpool will simply pick up any task that is ready to continue as long as it has free threads?
Bill Gates do. He looks above the cloud and from there, he will decide if he's going to spawn a new thread for the Task or not :D jk. I believe it's the logic set on the thread pool. I also believe, Task uses thread pool internally.
Yes, the runtime decides. Because it isn't transparent, there is .ConfigureAwait(bool) in case you rely on finishing it in the same thread, like things being awaited from the UI thread.
in Java, you also have lightweight threads, which are virtual threads these can be attached and detached to an OS thread for processing and they are extremely small objects so you can easily make millions of them
lightweight threads are more similar to Task in C#, but using the api of Thread
@mr5 it won't guarantee neither. These will inform sync context, that it should be long running, so go on other thread, but it possibly won't if you don't have enough free threads. You just signal you want to fork...
@mr5 kotlin's coroutines will probably be refactored to use the lightweight threads as implementation, but considering kotlin targets more than just Java, they cant use the lightweight threads 1:1
@Alex for me, I learn most of these things by creating my own GUI framework from "scratch". But I only retain the fundamentals in the long run. For language specifics, I would have forgotten them in just a few months.
async void OnCreate(...)
{
// On UI thread
var permissionResult = await permissionService.Request(...)
}
async void OnPermissionResult(data)
{
// On UI thread
// will invoke once the user taps the dialog prompt
permissionService.SetResult(data)
}
you could await them in sequence (so only one handler runs at one time) you could await them concurrently/parallel (so all handlers finish before the event executor continues) you could await in sequence in an unawaited task (so only one handler runs at one time, but the executor doesnt wait) you could not await them at all
and probably more
the event executor could also queue your tasks in a special background thread pool so your event handlers have a lower priority
async Task everywhere, except when you cant
for example, WPF searches for functions by signature and demands that the init method returns void
so, you cant return Task or it will not find your init method
the same with (older) event handlers, which usually had a delegate that returns void
hmm, I think now it's more about Android than Kotlin itself. Also, I'm actually going to test now this code if it will not block the UI thread: `runBlocking { launch { longRunningOps() } }`
If you're curious, it's about WebView. Do you has te xp about Android's WebView?
Yes sorry really quick so I have a Purchase Orders and Purchase Items so I have a Edit view that I can edit the items, but I want to add new items at the same time
Did some research into UI testing with Selenium and special browser versions that plug into the unit tests. It's cool stuff though can be time consuming
@Wietlol A colleague has something like that, I just don't remember the name. It's available as a browser extension. ka... ca... cadan... kala... something in that direction.
Katalon Recorder
Basically you activate recording, and it makes a list of things happening, optionally including waiting times.
Usually you just use it as macro tool, but you might aswell use the list and convert it for another tool
for me, I have my own hosted service that runs certain scripts
I want to generate a script using the recorded browser interaction
obviously, selenium and katalon wouldn't have support for my own tool
but if they can just expose the information, I can write my own code generator
it shouldnt be that difficult
the problem is that all recorders that I tried are either missing quite important information or simply dont expose the useful information and only allow you to export a generated result