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Home/ Questions/Q 8300437
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 8, 20262026-06-08T16:33:44+00:00 2026-06-08T16:33:44+00:00

If I have a method like Task<bool> LongProcessTaskAsync(); Would it be a better practice

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If I have a method like

Task<bool> LongProcessTaskAsync();

Would it be a better practice to return a started task

return Task<bool>.Factory.StartNew(() => { ... });

or just return new Task<bool>(() => ...)

Personally, I prefer the first method but I’d rather be consistent will other API’s and libraries.

Is returning a not-started task ever more appropriate?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-08T16:33:46+00:00Added an answer on June 8, 2026 at 4:33 pm

    In the case of async/await methods, the Task will already be started. AFAIK, all the BCL methods added for Task-based versions return already-started Tasks. It would be kinda weird not to, since the common consumer case is now:

    var foo = await GetFooAsync();
    

    [EDIT] Based on Stephen pointing out that the TAP guidelines covers this (and he already includes a link to the guidelines), I’ll include a quote of the relevant bit from page 4 (in The Task-based Asynchronous Pattern Defined -> Behavior -> Task Status), and I’ve added bold+italics around the key parts.

    Task Status

    The Task class provides a life cycle for asynchronous operations, and
    that cycle is represented by the TaskStatus enumeration. In order to
    support corner cases of types deriving from Task and Task as
    well as the separation of construction from scheduling, the Task class
    exposes a Start method. Tasks created by its public constructors are
    referred to as “cold” tasks, in that they begin their life cycle in
    the non-scheduled TaskStatus.Created state, and it’s not until Start
    is called on these instances that they progress to being scheduled.
    All other tasks begin their life cycle in a “hot” state, meaning that
    the asynchronous operations they represent have already been initiated
    and their TaskStatus is an enumeration value other than Created.

    All tasks returned from TAP methods must be “hot.” If a TAP method
    internally uses a Task’s constructor to instantiate the task to be
    returned, the TAP method must call Start on the Task object prior to
    returning it. Consumers of a TAP method may safely assume that the
    returned task is “hot,” and should not attempt to call Start on any
    Task returned from a TAP method.
    Calling Start on a “hot” task will
    result in an InvalidOperationException (this check is handled
    automatically by the Task class).

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