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Home/ Questions/Q 6004265
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Editorial Team
  • 0
Editorial Team
Asked: May 23, 20262026-05-23T01:14:20+00:00 2026-05-23T01:14:20+00:00

class ClassA { public delegate void WriteLog(string msg); private WriteLog m_WriteLogDelegate; public ClassA(WriteLog writelog)

  • 0
class ClassA
{
public delegate void WriteLog(string msg);
private WriteLog m_WriteLogDelegate;

public ClassA(WriteLog writelog)
{
    m_WriteLogDelegate =  writelog;
    Thread thread = new Thread(new ThreadStart(Search));
    thread.Start();
}

public void Search()
{
    /* ... */
    m_WriteLogDelegate("msg");
    /* ... */
}

}

class classB
{
        private ClassA m_classA;

        protected void WriteLogCallBack(string msg)
        {
            // prints msg
            /* ... */
        }

        public classB()
        {
            m_classA = new ClassA(new WriteLog(WriteLogCallBack));
        }

        public void test1()
        {
            Thread thread = new Thread(new ThreadStart(Run));
            thread.Start();
        }

        public void test2()
        {
            m_classA.Search();
        }

        public void Run()
        {
            while(true)
            {
                /* ... */
                m_classA.Search();
                /* ... */
                Thread.Sleep(1000);
            }
        }
}

Why the following code

ClassB b = new ClassB();
b.test2() 

prints “msg”
and this one

ClassB b = new ClassB();
b.test1() 

doesn’t print anything?

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-23T01:14:21+00:00Added an answer on May 23, 2026 at 1:14 am

    Your program likely exits causing the thread to be terminated (or before the thread has time to start). Just as you explicitly created a thread, you need to explicitly wait for the thread to complete!

    You need to use Thread.Join or some other method to keep the main program waiting for the thread to complete.

    One possible option, using Thread.Join:

    public Thread test2()
    {
        ...
        return thread;
    }
    
    ...
    
    b.test2().Join(); // wait for test2 to complete
    

    Another option, using a ManualResetEvent:

    class classB
    {
        private ManualResetEvent mre = new ManualResetEvent(false);
    
        ...
    
        private void Run()
        {
            ...
    
            this.mre.Set(); // we completed our task
        }
    
        public void Wait();
        {
            this.mre.WaitOne();
        }
    

    Then your code which call b.test2():

    b.test2();
    b.Wait();
    
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