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Await Operator (Visual Basic)

You apply the Await operator to an operand in an asynchronous method or lambda expression to suspend execution of the method until the awaited task completes. The task represents ongoing work.

The method in which Await is used must have an Async modifier. Such a method, defined by using the Async modifier, and usually containing one or more Await expressions, is referred to as an async method.

Note

The Async and Await keywords were introduced in Visual Studio 2012. For information about new features in that version, see What's New in Visual Studio 2012.

For an introduction to async programming, see Asynchronous Programming with Async and Await (C# and Visual Basic).

Typically, the task to which you apply the Await operator is the return value from a call to a method that implements the Task-Based Asynchronous Pattern, that is, a Task or a Task<TResult>.

In the following code, the HttpClient method GetByteArrayAsync returns getContentsTask, a Task(Of Byte()). The task is a promise to produce the actual byte array when the operation is complete. The Await operator is applied to getContentsTask to suspend execution in SumPageSizesAsync until getContentsTask is complete. In the meantime, control is returned to the caller of SumPageSizesAsync. When getContentsTask is finished, the Await expression evaluates to a byte array.

Private Async Function SumPageSizesAsync() As Task

    ' To use the HttpClient type in desktop apps, you must include a using directive and add a 
    ' reference for the System.Net.Http namespace.
    Dim client As HttpClient = New HttpClient() 
    ' . . . 
    Dim getContentsTask As Task(Of Byte()) = client.GetByteArrayAsync(url)
    Dim urlContents As Byte() = Await getContentsTask

    ' Equivalently, now that you see how it works, you can write the same thing in a single line.
    'Dim urlContents As Byte() = Await client.GetByteArrayAsync(url)
    ' . . .
End Function

Important

For the complete example, see Walkthrough: Accessing the Web by Using Async and Await (C# and Visual Basic). You can download the sample from Developer Code Samples on the Microsoft website. The example is in the AsyncWalkthrough_HttpClient project.

If Await is applied to the result of a method call that returns a Task(Of TResult), the type of the Await expression is TResult. If Await is applied to the result of a method call that returns a Task, the Await expression doesn't return a value. The following example illustrates the difference.

' Await used with a method that returns a Task(Of TResult).
Dim result As TResult = Await AsyncMethodThatReturnsTaskTResult()

' Await used with a method that returns a Task.
Await AsyncMethodThatReturnsTask()

An Await expression or statement does not block the thread on which it is executing. Instead, it causes the compiler to sign up the rest of the async method, after the Await expression, as a continuation on the awaited task. Control then returns to the caller of the async method. When the task completes, it invokes its continuation, and execution of the async method resumes where it left off.

An Await expression can occur only in the body of an immediately enclosing method or lambda expression that is marked by an Async modifier. The term Await serves as a keyword only in that context. Elsewhere, it is interpreted as an identifier. Within the async method or lambda expression, an Await expression cannot occur in a query expression, in the catch or finally block of a Try…Catch…Finally statement, in the loop control variable expression of a For or For Each loop, or in the body of a SyncLock statement.

Exceptions

Most async methods return a Task or Task<TResult>. The properties of the returned task carry information about its status and history, such as whether the task is complete, whether the async method caused an exception or was canceled, and what the final result is. The Await operator accesses those properties.

If you await a task-returning async method that causes an exception, the Await operator rethrows the exception.

If you await a task-returning async method that is canceled, the Await operator rethrows an OperationCanceledException.

A single task that is in a faulted state can reflect multiple exceptions. For example, the task might be the result of a call to Task.WhenAll. When you await such a task, the await operation rethrows only one of the exceptions. However, you can't predict which of the exceptions is rethrown.

For examples of error handling in async methods, see Try...Catch...Finally Statement (Visual Basic).

Example

The following Windows Forms example illustrates the use of Await in an async method, WaitAsynchronouslyAsync. Contrast the behavior of that method with the behavior of WaitSynchronously. Without an Await operator, WaitSynchronously runs synchronously despite the use of the Async modifier in its definition and a call to Thread.Sleep in its body.

Private Async Sub Button1_Click(sender As Object, e As EventArgs) Handles Button1.Click
    ' Call the method that runs asynchronously.
    Dim result As String = Await WaitAsynchronouslyAsync()

    ' Call the method that runs synchronously.
    'Dim result As String = Await WaitSynchronously()

    ' Display the result.
    TextBox1.Text &= result
End Sub

' The following method runs asynchronously. The UI thread is not
' blocked during the delay. You can move or resize the Form1 window 
' while Task.Delay is running.
Public Async Function WaitAsynchronouslyAsync() As Task(Of String)
    Await Task.Delay(10000)
    Return "Finished"
End Function

' The following method runs synchronously, despite the use of Async.
' You cannot move or resize the Form1 window while Thread.Sleep
' is running because the UI thread is blocked.
Public Async Function WaitSynchronously() As Task(Of String)
    ' Import System.Threading for the Sleep method.
    Thread.Sleep(10000)
    Return "Finished"
End Function

See Also

Tasks

Walkthrough: Accessing the Web by Using Async and Await (C# and Visual Basic)

Reference

Async (Visual Basic)

Concepts

Asynchronous Programming with Async and Await (C# and Visual Basic)