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Task Parallel Library

The Task Parallel Library (TPL) is a set of public types and APIs in the System.Threading and System.Threading.Tasks namespaces in the .NET Framework version 4. The purpose of the TPL is to make developers more productive by simplifying the process of adding parallelism and concurrency to applications. The TPL scales the degree of concurrency dynamically to most efficiently use all the processors that are available. In addition, the TPL handles the partitioning of the work, the scheduling of threads on the ThreadPool, cancellation support, state management, and other low-level details. By using TPL, you can maximize the performance of your code while focusing on the work that your program is designed to accomplish. 

Starting with the .NET Framework 4, the TPL is the preferred way to write multithreaded and parallel code. However, not all code is suitable for parallelization; for example, if a loop performs only a small amount of work on each iteration, or it doesn't run for many iterations, then the overhead of parallelization can cause the code to run more slowly. Furthermore, parallelization like any multithreaded code adds complexity to your program execution. Although the TPL simplifies multithreaded scenarios, we recommend that you have a basic understanding of threading concepts, for example, locks, deadlocks, and race conditions, so that you can use the TPL effectively. For more information about basic parallel computing concepts, see the Parallel Computer Developer Center on MSDN.

Title

Description

Data Parallelism (Task Parallel Library)

Describes how to create parallel for and foreach loops (For and For Each in Visual Basic).

Task Parallelism (Task Parallel Library)

Describes how to create and run tasks implicitly by using Parallel.Invoke or explicitly by using Task objects directly.

TPL With Other Asynchronous Patterns

Describes how to use TPL with other asynchronous patterns in .NET

Potential Pitfalls in Data and Task Parallelism

Describes some common pitfalls and how to avoid them.

Parallel LINQ (PLINQ)

Describes how to achieve data parallelism with LINQ queries.

Parallel Programming in the .NET Framework

Top level node for .NET parallel programming.