TimerCallback Delegate
Definition
Important
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Represents the method that handles calls from a Timer.
public delegate void TimerCallback(System::Object ^ state);
[System.Runtime.InteropServices.ComVisible(true)]
public delegate void TimerCallback(object state);
public delegate void TimerCallback(object? state);
public delegate void TimerCallback(object state);
[<System.Runtime.InteropServices.ComVisible(true)>]
type TimerCallback = delegate of obj -> unit
type TimerCallback = delegate of obj -> unit
Public Delegate Sub TimerCallback(state As Object)
Parameters
- state
- Object
An object containing application-specific information relevant to the method invoked by this delegate, or null
.
- Attributes
Examples
The following code example shows how to create the delegate used with the Timer
class.
using namespace System;
using namespace System::Threading;
ref class StatusChecker
{
private:
int invokeCount, maxCount;
public:
StatusChecker(int count)
{
invokeCount = 0;
maxCount = count;
}
// This method is called by the timer delegate.
void CheckStatus(Object^ stateInfo)
{
AutoResetEvent^ autoEvent = dynamic_cast<AutoResetEvent^>(stateInfo);
Console::WriteLine("{0:h:mm:ss.fff} Checking status {1,2}.",
DateTime::Now, ++invokeCount);
if (invokeCount == maxCount) {
// Reset the counter and signal the waiting thread.
invokeCount = 0;
autoEvent->Set();
}
}
};
ref class TimerExample
{
public:
static void Main()
{
// Create an AutoResetEvent to signal the timeout threshold in the
// timer callback has been reached.
AutoResetEvent^ autoEvent = gcnew AutoResetEvent(false);
StatusChecker^ statusChecker = gcnew StatusChecker(10);
// Create a delegate that invokes methods for the timer.
TimerCallback^ tcb =
gcnew TimerCallback(statusChecker, &StatusChecker::CheckStatus);
// Create a timer that invokes CheckStatus after one second,
// and every 1/4 second thereafter.
Console::WriteLine("{0:h:mm:ss.fff} Creating timer.\n",
DateTime::Now);
Timer^ stateTimer = gcnew Timer(tcb, autoEvent, 1000, 250);
// When autoEvent signals, change the period to every half second.
autoEvent->WaitOne(5000, false);
stateTimer->Change(0, 500);
Console::WriteLine("\nChanging period to .5 seconds.\n");
// When autoEvent signals the second time, dispose of the timer.
autoEvent->WaitOne(5000, false);
stateTimer->~Timer();
Console::WriteLine("\nDestroying timer.");
}
};
int main()
{
TimerExample::Main();
}
// The example displays output like the following:
// 11:59:54.202 Creating timer.
//
// 11:59:55.217 Checking status 1.
// 11:59:55.466 Checking status 2.
// 11:59:55.716 Checking status 3.
// 11:59:55.968 Checking status 4.
// 11:59:56.218 Checking status 5.
// 11:59:56.470 Checking status 6.
// 11:59:56.722 Checking status 7.
// 11:59:56.972 Checking status 8.
// 11:59:57.223 Checking status 9.
// 11:59:57.473 Checking status 10.
//
// Changing period to .5 seconds.
//
// 11:59:57.474 Checking status 1.
// 11:59:57.976 Checking status 2.
// 11:59:58.476 Checking status 3.
// 11:59:58.977 Checking status 4.
// 11:59:59.477 Checking status 5.
// 11:59:59.977 Checking status 6.
// 12:00:00.478 Checking status 7.
// 12:00:00.980 Checking status 8.
// 12:00:01.481 Checking status 9.
// 12:00:01.981 Checking status 10.
//
// Destroying timer.
using System;
using System.Threading;
class TimerExample
{
static void Main()
{
// Create an AutoResetEvent to signal the timeout threshold in the
// timer callback has been reached.
var autoEvent = new AutoResetEvent(false);
var statusChecker = new StatusChecker(10);
// Create a timer that invokes CheckStatus after one second,
// and every 1/4 second thereafter.
Console.WriteLine("{0:h:mm:ss.fff} Creating timer.\n",
DateTime.Now);
var stateTimer = new Timer(statusChecker.CheckStatus,
autoEvent, 1000, 250);
// When autoEvent signals, change the period to every half second.
autoEvent.WaitOne();
stateTimer.Change(0, 500);
Console.WriteLine("\nChanging period to .5 seconds.\n");
// When autoEvent signals the second time, dispose of the timer.
autoEvent.WaitOne();
stateTimer.Dispose();
Console.WriteLine("\nDestroying timer.");
}
}
class StatusChecker
{
private int invokeCount;
private int maxCount;
public StatusChecker(int count)
{
invokeCount = 0;
maxCount = count;
}
// This method is called by the timer delegate.
public void CheckStatus(Object stateInfo)
{
AutoResetEvent autoEvent = (AutoResetEvent)stateInfo;
Console.WriteLine("{0} Checking status {1,2}.",
DateTime.Now.ToString("h:mm:ss.fff"),
(++invokeCount).ToString());
if(invokeCount == maxCount)
{
// Reset the counter and signal the waiting thread.
invokeCount = 0;
autoEvent.Set();
}
}
}
// The example displays output like the following:
// 11:59:54.202 Creating timer.
//
// 11:59:55.217 Checking status 1.
// 11:59:55.466 Checking status 2.
// 11:59:55.716 Checking status 3.
// 11:59:55.968 Checking status 4.
// 11:59:56.218 Checking status 5.
// 11:59:56.470 Checking status 6.
// 11:59:56.722 Checking status 7.
// 11:59:56.972 Checking status 8.
// 11:59:57.223 Checking status 9.
// 11:59:57.473 Checking status 10.
//
// Changing period to .5 seconds.
//
// 11:59:57.474 Checking status 1.
// 11:59:57.976 Checking status 2.
// 11:59:58.476 Checking status 3.
// 11:59:58.977 Checking status 4.
// 11:59:59.477 Checking status 5.
// 11:59:59.977 Checking status 6.
// 12:00:00.478 Checking status 7.
// 12:00:00.980 Checking status 8.
// 12:00:01.481 Checking status 9.
// 12:00:01.981 Checking status 10.
//
// Destroying timer.
Imports System.Threading
Public Module Example
Public Sub Main()
' Use an AutoResetEvent to signal the timeout threshold in the
' timer callback has been reached.
Dim autoEvent As New AutoResetEvent(False)
Dim statusChecker As New StatusChecker(10)
' Create a timer that invokes CheckStatus after one second,
' and every 1/4 second thereafter.
Console.WriteLine("{0:h:mm:ss.fff} Creating timer." & vbCrLf,
DateTime.Now)
Dim stateTimer As New Timer(AddressOf statusChecker.CheckStatus,
autoEvent, 1000, 250)
' When autoEvent signals, change the period to every half second.
autoEvent.WaitOne()
stateTimer.Change(0, 500)
Console.WriteLine(vbCrLf & "Changing period to .5 seconds." & vbCrLf)
' When autoEvent signals the second time, dispose of the timer.
autoEvent.WaitOne()
stateTimer.Dispose()
Console.WriteLine(vbCrLf & "Destroying timer.")
End Sub
End Module
Public Class StatusChecker
Dim invokeCount, maxCount As Integer
Sub New(count As Integer)
invokeCount = 0
maxCount = count
End Sub
' The timer callback method.
Sub CheckStatus(stateInfo As Object)
Dim autoEvent As AutoResetEvent = DirectCast(stateInfo, AutoResetEvent)
invokeCount += 1
Console.WriteLine("{0:h:mm:ss.fff} Checking status {1,2}.",
DateTime.Now, invokeCount)
If invokeCount = maxCount Then
' Reset the counter and signal the waiting thread.
invokeCount = 0
autoEvent.Set()
End If
End Sub
End Class
' The example displays output like the following:
' 11:59:54.202 Creating timer.
'
' 11:59:55.217 Checking status 1.
' 11:59:55.466 Checking status 2.
' 11:59:55.716 Checking status 3.
' 11:59:55.968 Checking status 4.
' 11:59:56.218 Checking status 5.
' 11:59:56.470 Checking status 6.
' 11:59:56.722 Checking status 7.
' 11:59:56.972 Checking status 8.
' 11:59:57.223 Checking status 9.
' 11:59:57.473 Checking status 10.
'
' Changing period to .5 seconds.
'
' 11:59:57.474 Checking status 1.
' 11:59:57.976 Checking status 2.
' 11:59:58.476 Checking status 3.
' 11:59:58.977 Checking status 4.
' 11:59:59.477 Checking status 5.
' 11:59:59.977 Checking status 6.
' 12:00:00.478 Checking status 7.
' 12:00:00.980 Checking status 8.
' 12:00:01.481 Checking status 9.
' 12:00:01.981 Checking status 10.
'
' Destroying timer.
Remarks
Use a TimerCallback
delegate to specify the method that is called by a Timer. This method does not execute in the thread that created the timer; it executes in a separate thread pool thread that is provided by the system. The TimerCallback
delegate invokes the method once after the start time elapses, and continues to invoke it once per timer interval until the Dispose method is called, or until the Timer.Change method is called with the interval value Infinite.
Note
Callbacks can occur after the Dispose() method overload has been called, because the timer queues callbacks for execution by thread pool threads. You can use the Dispose(WaitHandle) method overload to wait until all callbacks have completed.
The timer delegate is specified when the timer is constructed, and cannot be changed. The start time for a Timer
is passed in the dueTime
parameter of the Timer
constructors, and the period is passed in the period
parameter. For an example that demonstrates creating and using a TimerCallback
delegate, see System.Threading.Timer.
Extension Methods
GetMethodInfo(Delegate) |
Gets an object that represents the method represented by the specified delegate. |