Today I was wondering how to transform a list of Tasks by awaiting each of it.
Consider the following example:
private static void Main(string[] args)
{
try
{
Run(args);
Console.ReadLine();
}
catch (Exception ex)
{
Console.WriteLine(ex.ToString());
Console.ReadLine();
}
}
static async Task Run(string[] args)
{
//Version 1: does compile, but ugly and List<T> overhead
var tasks1 = GetTasks();
List<string> gainStrings1 = new List<string>();
foreach (Task<string> task in tasks1)
{
gainStrings1.Add(await task);
}
Console.WriteLine(string.Join("", gainStrings1));
//Version 2: does not compile
var tasks2 = GetTasks();
IEnumerable<string> gainStrings2 = tasks2.Select(async t => await t);
Console.WriteLine(string.Join("", gainStrings2));
}
static IEnumerable<Task<string>> GetTasks()
{
string[] messages = new[] { "Hello", " ", "async", " ", "World" };
for (int i = 0; i < messages.Length; i++)
{
TaskCompletionSource<string> tcs = new TaskCompletionSource<string>();
tcs.SetResult(messages[i]);
yield return tcs.Task;
}
}
I'd like to transform my list of Tasks without the foreach, however either the anonymous function syntax nor the usual function syntax allows me to do what my foreach does.
Do I have to rely on my foreach and the List<T>
or is there any way to get it to work with IEnumerable<T>
and all its advantages?
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