I have an object that returns a System.Threading.Tasks.Task:
public class MyClass
{
public Task GetTask(object state, CancellationToken cancellationToken)
{
return new Task(Execute, state, cancellationToken);
}
public void Execute(object context)
{
//do stuff
}
}
Elsewhere I have a List<MyClass>, so I do the following to get a List<Task>:
var myTaskList = myClassList.Select(p => p.GetTask(null, cancellationToken)).ToList();
Now that I have the List<Task>, how can I start them all in parallel? Is there a more concise way to code this?
Thanks!
What do you mean by “start them in parallel”? When you run the
Task, it executes on another thread, so you probably mean simply:But if you have so many of them that you want to move the starting logic to another thread, you can either call the above code in another thread/task (I’m using
List<T>.ForEachfor shorter code).Or you can use TPL’s
Parallel.ForEach. That would still block the executing thread until all the Tasks are started, but it will execute the start action on an internal threadpool, so for large numbers of items and some free CPU cores/threads, it might speed up the starting considerably.