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Home/ Questions/Q 6201051
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 24, 20262026-05-24T04:28:57+00:00 2026-05-24T04:28:57+00:00

I’m converting some async/await code to chained tasks, so I can use it in

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I’m converting some async/await code to chained tasks, so I can use it in the released framework. The await code looks like this

public async Task<TraumMessage> Get() {
  var message = await Invoke("GET");
  var memorized = await message.Memorize();
  return memorized;
}

where

Task<TraumMessage> Invoke(string verb) {}
Task<TraumMessage> Memorize() {}

I was hoping to chain Invoke and Memorize to return the task produced by Memorize, but that results in a Task<Task<TraumMessage>. The solution i’ve ended up is a TaskCompletionSource<TraumMessage> as my signal:

public Task<TraumMessage> Get() {
  var completion = new TaskCompletionSource<TraumMessage>();
  Invoke("GET").ContinueWith( t1 => {
     if(t1.IsFaulted) {
       completion.SetException(t1.Exception);
       return;
     }
     t1.Result.Memorize().ContinueWith( t2 => {
       if(t2.IsFaulted) {
         completion.SetException(t2.Exception);
         return;
       }
       completion.SetResult(t2.Result);
     });
  });
  return completion.Task;
}

Is there a way to accomplish this without the TaskCompletionSource?

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-24T04:28:58+00:00Added an answer on May 24, 2026 at 4:28 am

    I think that’s pretty much the only way to accomplish what you want. Chaining disparate Tasks together isn’t supported by the continuation APIs, so you have to resort to using a TaskCompletionSource like you have to coordinate the work.

    I don’t have the Async CTP installed on this machine, but why don’t you take a look at the code with a decompiler (or ILDASM if you know how to read IL) to see what it’s doing. I bet it does something very similar to your TCS code under the covers.

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