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Home/ Questions/Q 3451056
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 18, 20262026-05-18T09:06:29+00:00 2026-05-18T09:06:29+00:00

How would you send/pass instance references to a new task? Let’s say I’ve got

  • 0

How would you send/pass instance references to a new task?

Let’s say I’ve got this:

    public BlockingCollection<string> blockingCollection = new BlockingCollection<string>();
    textBox_txt.Text = "Result: ";
    public Task t = Task.Factory.StartNew(() =>
    {
        foreach (string value in *???1*.blockingCollection.GetConsumingEnumerable())
        {
            *???1*.blockingCollection.Take() 
            [...bla...]
            *???2*.Invoke(new updateTextBox_txtCallback(*???2*.updatetextBox_txt)
                          , new object[] { "THE RESULT!\r\n" });
        }                
    });

I’m guessing that somewhere in here StartNew(() => I have to pass the references to the blockingContent and to the textBox. I’ve looked around but couldn’t figure out the syntax. (it’s quite hairy)

Help, please.

[Edit] So, if I call a static object from withing the Task, it obviously works; but I need the task to work with instances; namely the blockingCollection and the updateTextBox_txtCallback Invoke.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-18T09:06:29+00:00Added an answer on May 18, 2026 at 9:06 am

    I reproduced your problem, with a workaround below. The problem is that you are using the Task as a field in your class so it can only refer to static members, as the instance hasn’t been constructed until the constructor is run (the field initializers are called before the class is initialized).
    From the C# specification (10.5.5.2):

    A variable initializer for an instance
    field cannot reference the instance
    being created. Thus, it is a
    compile-time error to reference this
    in a variable initializer, as it is a
    compile-time error for a variable
    initializer to reference any instance
    member through a simple-name. In the
    example class A { int x = 1; int y =
    x + 1; // Error, reference to
    instance member of this } the variable
    initializer for y results in a
    compile-time error because it
    references a member of the instance
    being created.

    Basically you have two options:

    1. Initialize your Task variable in the
      constructor
    2. Use a method instead for retrieval

    Example:

    public class Foo
    {
        public string myProperty = "foobar";
        public Task t;
    
        public Foo()
        {
            t = Task.Factory.StartNew(() =>
            {
                myProperty = "test";
    
            });
        }
    
        //THIS won't compile
        //public Task t = Task.Factory.StartNew(() =>
        //{
        //    myProperty = "test";
    
        //});
    
        public Task GetTask()
        {
            Task t = Task.Factory.StartNew(() =>
            {
                myProperty = "test";
    
            });
            return t;
        }
    }
    
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