I have these example code:
private async Task<IEnumerable<long>> GetValidIds1(long[] ids)
{
var validIds = new List<long>();
var results = await Task.WhenAll(ids.Select(i => CheckValidIdAsync(i)))
.ConfigureAwait(false);
for (int i = 0; i < ids.Length; i++)
{
if (results[i])
{
validIds.Add(ids[i]);
}
}
return validIds;
}
private async Task<IEnumerable<long>> GetValidIds2(long[] ids)
{
var validIds = new ConcurrentBag<long>();
await Task.WhenAll(ids.Select(async i =>
{
var valid = await CheckValidIdAsync(i);
if (valid)
validIds.Add(i);
})).ConfigureAwait(false);
return validIds;
}
private async Task<bool> CheckValidIdAsync(long id);
I currently use GetValidIds1() but it has inconvenience of having to tie input ids to result using index at the end.
GetValidIds2() is what i want to write but there are a few concerns:
- I have 'await' in select lambda expression. Because LINQ is lazy evaluation, I don't think it would block other
CheckValidIdAsync()
calls from starting but exactly who's context does it suspend? Per MSDN doc
The await operator suspends evaluation of the enclosing async method until the asynchronous operation represented by its operand completes.
So in this case, the enclosing async method is lambda expression itself so it doesn't affect other calls?
- Is there a better way to process result of async method and collect output of that process in a list?