Stream.BeginWrite(Byte[], Int32, Int32, AsyncCallback, Object) Method
Definition
Important
Some information relates to prerelease product that may be substantially modified before it’s released. Microsoft makes no warranties, express or implied, with respect to the information provided here.
Begins an asynchronous write operation. (Consider using WriteAsync(Byte[], Int32, Int32) instead.)
public:
virtual IAsyncResult ^ BeginWrite(cli::array <System::Byte> ^ buffer, int offset, int count, AsyncCallback ^ callback, System::Object ^ state);
public virtual IAsyncResult BeginWrite (byte[] buffer, int offset, int count, AsyncCallback? callback, object? state);
public virtual IAsyncResult BeginWrite (byte[] buffer, int offset, int count, AsyncCallback callback, object state);
public virtual IAsyncResult BeginWrite (byte[] buffer, int offset, int count, AsyncCallback callback, object? state);
abstract member BeginWrite : byte[] * int * int * AsyncCallback * obj -> IAsyncResult
override this.BeginWrite : byte[] * int * int * AsyncCallback * obj -> IAsyncResult
Public Overridable Function BeginWrite (buffer As Byte(), offset As Integer, count As Integer, callback As AsyncCallback, state As Object) As IAsyncResult
Parameters
- buffer
- Byte[]
The buffer to write data from.
- offset
- Int32
The byte offset in buffer
from which to begin writing.
- count
- Int32
The maximum number of bytes to write.
- callback
- AsyncCallback
An optional asynchronous callback, to be called when the write is complete.
- state
- Object
A user-provided object that distinguishes this particular asynchronous write request from other requests.
Returns
An IAsyncResult
that represents the asynchronous write, which could still be pending.
Exceptions
Attempted an asynchronous write past the end of the stream, or a disk error occurs.
One or more of the arguments is invalid.
Methods were called after the stream was closed.
The current Stream
implementation does not support the write operation.
Remarks
In the .NET Framework 4 and earlier versions, you have to use methods such as BeginWrite and EndWrite to implement asynchronous I/O operations. These methods are still available in the .NET Framework 4.5 to support legacy code; however, the new async methods, such as ReadAsync, WriteAsync, CopyToAsync, and FlushAsync, help you implement asynchronous I/O operations more easily.
The default implementation of BeginWrite
on a stream calls the Write method synchronously, which means that Write
might block on some streams. However, instances of classes such as FileStream
and NetworkStream
fully support asynchronous operations if the instances have been opened asynchronously. Therefore, calls to BeginWrite
will not block on those streams. You can override BeginWrite
(by using async delegates, for example) to provide asynchronous behavior.
Pass the IAsyncResult
returned by the current method to EndWrite to ensure that the write completes and frees resources appropriately. EndWrite must be called once for every call to BeginWrite. You can do this either by using the same code that called BeginWrite
or in a callback passed to BeginWrite
. If an error occurs during an asynchronous write, an exception will not be thrown until EndWrite
is called with the IAsyncResult
returned by this method.
If a stream is writable, writing at the end of the stream expands the stream.
The current position in the stream is updated when you issue the asynchronous read or write, not when the I/O operation completes. Multiple simultaneous asynchronous requests render the request completion order uncertain.
Use the CanWrite property to determine whether the current instance supports writing.
If a stream is closed or you pass an invalid argument, exceptions are thrown immediately from BeginWrite
. Errors that occur during an asynchronous write request, such as a disk failure during the I/O request, occur on the thread pool thread and throw exceptions when calling EndWrite
.