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Learn C# Programming

You're reading from   Learn C# Programming A guide to building a solid foundation in C# language for writing efficient programs

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789805864
Length 636 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (4):
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Raffaele Rialdi Raffaele Rialdi
Author Profile Icon Raffaele Rialdi
Raffaele Rialdi
Ankit Sharma Ankit Sharma
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Ankit Sharma
Prakash Tripathi Prakash Tripathi
Author Profile Icon Prakash Tripathi
Prakash Tripathi
Marius Bancila Marius Bancila
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Marius Bancila
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Toc

Table of Contents (20) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Chapter 1: Starting with the Building Blocks of C# 2. Chapter 2: Data Types and Operators FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 3: Control Statements and Exceptions 4. Chapter 4: Understanding the Various User-Defined Types 5. Chapter 5: Object-Oriented Programming in C# 6. Chapter 6: Generics 7. Chapter 7: Collections 8. Chapter 8: Advanced Topics 9. Chapter 9: Resource Management 10. Chapter 10: Lambdas, LINQ, and Functional Programming 11. Chapter 11: Reflection and Dynamic Programming 12. Chapter 12: Multithreading and Asynchronous Programming 13. Chapter 13: Files, Streams, and Serialization 14. Chapter 14: Error Handling 15. Chapter 15: New Features of C# 8 16. Chapter 16: C# in Action with .NET Core 3 17. Chapter 17: Unit Testing 18. Assessments 19. Other Books You May Enjoy

Asynchronous Dispose

After the advent of Tasks in .NET, most of the libraries managing I/O operations progressively moved to an asynchronous behavior. For example, the System.Net.Websocket class members embrace the Task-based programming strategy, providing a better developer experience and more efficient behavior.

Every time a developer needs to write a C# client to access some service based on the WebSocket protocol, they typically write a wrapper class exposing specialized send methods and implementing the dispose pattern to invoke the Websocket.CloseAsync method. We also know that any asynchronous method should return a Task, but the Dispose method has been defined as void far before the Task era, and therefore doesn't fit well in the Task chain.

The Websocket example is very realistic as I had this exact problem some time ago, where blocking the current thread to wait for the CloseAsync to finish inside the Dispose caused a deadlock.

Starting from C# 8 and .NET Core...

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