There are two ways you can do this, dependent on the version of the language you are using.
C# 5.0 and above
You can use the async
and await
keywords to simplify a great deal of this for you.
async
and await
were introduced into the language to simplify using the Task Parallel Library, preventing you from having to use ContinueWith
and allowing you to continue to program in a top-down manner.
Because of this, you can simply use a try
/catch
block to catch the exception, like so:
try
{
// Start the task.
var task = Task.Factory.StartNew<StateObject>(() => { /* action */ });
// Await the task.
await task;
}
catch (Exception e)
{
// Perform cleanup here.
}
Note that the method encapsulating the above must use have the async
keyword applied so you can use await
.
C# 4.0 and below
You can handle exceptions using the ContinueWith
overload that takes a value from the TaskContinuationOptions
enumeration, like so:
// Get the task.
var task = Task.Factory.StartNew<StateObject>(() => { /* action */ });
// For error handling.
task.ContinueWith(t => { /* error handling */ }, context,
TaskContinuationOptions.OnlyOnFaulted);
The OnlyOnFaulted
member of the TaskContinuationOptions
enumeration indicates that the continuation should only be executed if the antecedent task threw an exception.
Of course, you can have more than one call to ContinueWith
off the same antecedent, handling the non-exceptional case:
// Get the task.
var task = new Task<StateObject>(() => { /* action */ });
// For error handling.
task.ContinueWith(t => { /* error handling */ }, context,
TaskContinuationOptions.OnlyOnFaulted);
// If it succeeded.
task.ContinueWith(t => { /* on success */ }, context,
TaskContinuationOptions.OnlyOnRanToCompletion);
// Run task.
task.Start();
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