AsyncResult.AsyncDelegate Property
Definition
Important
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Gets the delegate object on which the asynchronous call was invoked.
public:
virtual property System::Object ^ AsyncDelegate { System::Object ^ get(); };
public virtual object AsyncDelegate { get; }
member this.AsyncDelegate : obj
Public Overridable ReadOnly Property AsyncDelegate As Object
Property Value
The delegate object on which the asynchronous call was invoked.
Examples
The following code example demonstrates how to use the AsyncDelegate property to get the delegate that was used to make the asynchronous call, in order to call EndInvoke
. The example casts the IAsyncResult, which is the only parameter of the callback method, to an AsyncResult object.
The example consists of two classes, the class that contains the method which is called asynchronously, and the class that contains the Main
method that makes the call.
For more information on the way this callback example works, and more examples of calling methods asynchronously by using delegates, see Calling Synchronous Methods Asynchronously.
using namespace System;
using namespace System::Threading;
using namespace System::Runtime::InteropServices;
namespace Examples {
namespace AdvancedProgramming {
namespace AsynchronousOperations
{
public ref class AsyncDemo
{
public:
// The method to be executed asynchronously.
String^ TestMethod(int callDuration, [OutAttribute] int% threadId)
{
Console::WriteLine("Test method begins.");
Thread::Sleep(callDuration);
threadId = Thread::CurrentThread->ManagedThreadId;
return String::Format("My call time was {0}.", callDuration);
}
};
// The delegate must have the same signature as the method
// it will call asynchronously.
public delegate String^ AsyncMethodCaller(int callDuration, [OutAttribute] int% threadId);
}}}
using System;
using System.Threading;
namespace Examples.AdvancedProgramming.AsynchronousOperations
{
public class AsyncDemo
{
// The method to be executed asynchronously.
public string TestMethod(int callDuration, out int threadId)
{
Console.WriteLine("Test method begins.");
Thread.Sleep(callDuration);
threadId = Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId;
return String.Format("My call time was {0}.", callDuration.ToString());
}
}
// The delegate must have the same signature as the method
// it will call asynchronously.
public delegate string AsyncMethodCaller(int callDuration, out int threadId);
}
Imports System.Threading
Imports System.Runtime.InteropServices
Namespace Examples.AdvancedProgramming.AsynchronousOperations
Public Class AsyncDemo
' The method to be executed asynchronously.
Public Function TestMethod(ByVal callDuration As Integer, _
<Out> ByRef threadId As Integer) As String
Console.WriteLine("Test method begins.")
Thread.Sleep(callDuration)
threadId = Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId()
return String.Format("My call time was {0}.", callDuration.ToString())
End Function
End Class
' The delegate must have the same signature as the method
' it will call asynchronously.
Public Delegate Function AsyncMethodCaller(ByVal callDuration As Integer, _
<Out> ByRef threadId As Integer) As String
End Namespace
#using <TestMethod.dll>
using namespace System;
using namespace System::Threading;
using namespace System::Runtime::Remoting::Messaging;
using namespace Examples::AdvancedProgramming::AsynchronousOperations;
// The callback method must have the same signature as the
// AsyncCallback delegate.
void CallbackMethod(IAsyncResult^ ar)
{
// Retrieve the delegate.
AsyncResult^ result = (AsyncResult^) ar;
AsyncMethodCaller^ caller = (AsyncMethodCaller^) result->AsyncDelegate;
// Retrieve the format string that was passed as state
// information.
String^ formatString = (String^) ar->AsyncState;
// Define a variable to receive the value of the out parameter.
// If the parameter were ref rather than out then it would have to
// be a class-level field so it could also be passed to BeginInvoke.
int threadId = 0;
// Call EndInvoke to retrieve the results.
String^ returnValue = caller->EndInvoke(threadId, ar);
// Use the format string to format the output message.
Console::WriteLine(formatString, threadId, returnValue);
};
void main()
{
// Create an instance of the test class.
AsyncDemo^ ad = gcnew AsyncDemo();
// Create the delegate.
AsyncMethodCaller^ caller = gcnew AsyncMethodCaller(ad, &AsyncDemo::TestMethod);
// The threadId parameter of TestMethod is an out parameter, so
// its input value is never used by TestMethod. Therefore, a dummy
// variable can be passed to the BeginInvoke call. If the threadId
// parameter were a ref parameter, it would have to be a class-
// level field so that it could be passed to both BeginInvoke and
// EndInvoke.
int dummy = 0;
// Initiate the asynchronous call, passing three seconds (3000 ms)
// for the callDuration parameter of TestMethod; a dummy variable
// for the out parameter (threadId); the callback delegate; and
// state information that can be retrieved by the callback method.
// In this case, the state information is a string that can be used
// to format a console message.
IAsyncResult^ result = caller->BeginInvoke(3000,
dummy,
gcnew AsyncCallback(&CallbackMethod),
"The call executed on thread {0}, with return value \"{1}\".");
Console::WriteLine("The main thread {0} continues to execute...",
Thread::CurrentThread->ManagedThreadId);
// The callback is made on a ThreadPool thread. ThreadPool threads
// are background threads, which do not keep the application running
// if the main thread ends. Comment out the next line to demonstrate
// this.
Thread::Sleep(4000);
Console::WriteLine("The main thread ends.");
}
/* This example produces output similar to the following:
The main thread 1 continues to execute...
Test method begins.
The call executed on thread 3, with return value "My call time was 3000.".
The main thread ends.
*/
using System;
using System.Threading;
using System.Runtime.Remoting.Messaging;
namespace Examples.AdvancedProgramming.AsynchronousOperations
{
public class AsyncMain
{
static void Main()
{
// Create an instance of the test class.
AsyncDemo ad = new AsyncDemo();
// Create the delegate.
AsyncMethodCaller caller = new AsyncMethodCaller(ad.TestMethod);
// The threadId parameter of TestMethod is an out parameter, so
// its input value is never used by TestMethod. Therefore, a dummy
// variable can be passed to the BeginInvoke call. If the threadId
// parameter were a ref parameter, it would have to be a class-
// level field so that it could be passed to both BeginInvoke and
// EndInvoke.
int dummy = 0;
// Initiate the asynchronous call, passing three seconds (3000 ms)
// for the callDuration parameter of TestMethod; a dummy variable
// for the out parameter (threadId); the callback delegate; and
// state information that can be retrieved by the callback method.
// In this case, the state information is a string that can be used
// to format a console message.
IAsyncResult result = caller.BeginInvoke(3000,
out dummy,
new AsyncCallback(CallbackMethod),
"The call executed on thread {0}, with return value \"{1}\".");
Console.WriteLine("The main thread {0} continues to execute...",
Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId);
// The callback is made on a ThreadPool thread. ThreadPool threads
// are background threads, which do not keep the application running
// if the main thread ends. Comment out the next line to demonstrate
// this.
Thread.Sleep(4000);
Console.WriteLine("The main thread ends.");
}
// The callback method must have the same signature as the
// AsyncCallback delegate.
static void CallbackMethod(IAsyncResult ar)
{
// Retrieve the delegate.
AsyncResult result = (AsyncResult) ar;
AsyncMethodCaller caller = (AsyncMethodCaller) result.AsyncDelegate;
// Retrieve the format string that was passed as state
// information.
string formatString = (string) ar.AsyncState;
// Define a variable to receive the value of the out parameter.
// If the parameter were ref rather than out then it would have to
// be a class-level field so it could also be passed to BeginInvoke.
int threadId = 0;
// Call EndInvoke to retrieve the results.
string returnValue = caller.EndInvoke(out threadId, ar);
// Use the format string to format the output message.
Console.WriteLine(formatString, threadId, returnValue);
}
}
}
/* This example produces output similar to the following:
The main thread 1 continues to execute...
Test method begins.
The call executed on thread 3, with return value "My call time was 3000.".
The main thread ends.
*/
Imports System.Threading
Imports System.Runtime.Remoting.Messaging
Namespace Examples.AdvancedProgramming.AsynchronousOperations
Public Class AsyncMain
Shared Sub Main()
' Create an instance of the test class.
Dim ad As New AsyncDemo()
' Create the delegate.
Dim caller As New AsyncMethodCaller(AddressOf ad.TestMethod)
' The threadId parameter of TestMethod is an <Out> parameter, so
' its input value is never used by TestMethod. Therefore, a dummy
' variable can be passed to the BeginInvoke call. If the threadId
' parameter were a ByRef parameter, it would have to be a class-
' level field so that it could be passed to both BeginInvoke and
' EndInvoke.
Dim dummy As Integer = 0
' Initiate the asynchronous call, passing three seconds (3000 ms)
' for the callDuration parameter of TestMethod; a dummy variable
' for the <Out> parameter (threadId); the callback delegate; and
' state information that can be retrieved by the callback method.
' In this case, the state information is a string that can be used
' to format a console message.
Dim result As IAsyncResult = caller.BeginInvoke(3000, _
dummy, _
AddressOf CallbackMethod, _
"The call executed on thread {0}, with return value ""{1}"".")
Console.WriteLine("The main thread {0} continues to execute...", _
Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId)
' The callback is made on a ThreadPool thread. ThreadPool threads
' are background threads, which do not keep the application running
' if the main thread ends. Comment out the next line to demonstrate
' this.
Thread.Sleep(4000)
Console.WriteLine("The main thread ends.")
End Sub
' The callback method must have the same signature as the
' AsyncCallback delegate.
Shared Sub CallbackMethod(ByVal ar As IAsyncResult)
' Retrieve the delegate.
Dim result As AsyncResult = CType(ar, AsyncResult)
Dim caller As AsyncMethodCaller = CType(result.AsyncDelegate, AsyncMethodCaller)
' Retrieve the format string that was passed as state
' information.
Dim formatString As String = CType(ar.AsyncState, String)
' Define a variable to receive the value of the <Out> parameter.
' If the parameter were ByRef rather than <Out> then it would have to
' be a class-level field so it could also be passed to BeginInvoke.
Dim threadId As Integer = 0
' Call EndInvoke to retrieve the results.
Dim returnValue As String = caller.EndInvoke(threadId, ar)
' Use the format string to format the output message.
Console.WriteLine(formatString, threadId, returnValue)
End Sub
End Class
End Namespace
' This example produces output similar to the following:
'
'The main thread 1 continues to execute...
'Test method begins.
'The call executed on thread 3, with return value "My call time was 3000.".
'The main thread ends.
Remarks
The AsyncDelegate property can be cast to the actual class of the user-defined delegate.
For example, if the delegate that was used to make the asynchronous call is of type MyDelegate
, the delegate that is returned by this property must be cast to MyDelegate
. The callback method can then call the delegate's EndInvoke
method with the correct signature, in order to obtain the results of the asynchronous method call.