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Quick question..
In order to get some solid base understanding about Asynchronous Programming and the await
I would like to know what is the difference between these two code snippets when it comes to multi threading and the execution sequence and time:
This:
public Task CloseApp()
{
return Task.Run(
()=>{
// save database
// turn off some lights
// shutdown application
});
}
Versus this:
public async Task CloseApp()
{
await Task.Run(
()=>{
// save database
// turn off some lights
// shutdown application
});
}
if I am calling it in this routine:
private async void closeButtonTask()
{
// Some Task 1
// ..
await CloseApp();
// Some Task 2
// ..
}
It is almost the same (in terms of threads etc.). But for the second one (using await
) a lot more overhead will be created by the compiler.
Methods declared as async
and using await
are converted into a state machine by the compiler. So when you hit the await
, the control flow is returned to the calling method and execution of your async
method is resumed after the await
when the awaited Task
has finished.
As there is no more code after your await
, there is no need to use await
anyway. Simply return the Task
is enough.
Post
method and notify the caller that the task was finished. As I remember the rest of async method will be executed as ContinueWith
. Execution will continue from await point, but it can be executed in different thread. - Joseph Katzman
There are very few differences between the two approaches. Basically, they share the same semantics. However, the version with async/await wraps the execution of the inner task in an outer compiler-generated task. The non-async version does not. Thus, the non-async version is (very marginally) more efficient.