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Home/ Questions/Q 3224982
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 17, 20262026-05-17T16:17:12+00:00 2026-05-17T16:17:12+00:00

I’ve just finished reading C# 4.0 in a Nutshell (O’Reilly) and I think it’s

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I’ve just finished reading “C# 4.0 in a Nutshell” (O’Reilly) and I think it’s a great book for a programmer willing to switch to C#, but it left me wondering. My problem is the definition of using statement. According to the book (p. 138),

using (StreamReader reader = File.OpenText("file.txt")) {
    ...
}

is precisely equivalent to:

StreamReader reader = File.OpenText("file.txt");
try {
    ...
} finally {
    if (reader != null)
        ((IDisposable)reader).Dispose();
}

Suppose, however, that this is true and that this code is executed in a separate thread. This thread is now aborted with thread.Abort(), so a ThreadAbortException is thrown and suppose the thread is exactly after initializing the reader and before entering the try..finally clause. This would mean that the reader is not disposed!

A possible solution would be to code this way:

StreamReader reader = null;
try {
    reader = File.OpenText("file.txt");
    ...
} finally {
    if (reader != null)
        ((IDisposable)reader).Dispose();
}

This would be abort-safe.

Now for my questions:

  1. Are authors of the book right and the using statement is not abort-safe or are they wrong and it behaves like in my second solution?
  2. If using is equivalent to the first variant (not abort-safe), why does it check for null in finally?
  3. According to the book (p. 856), ThreadAbortException can be thrown anywhere in managed code. But maybe there are exceptions and the first variant is abort-safe after all?

EDIT: I know that using thread.Abort() is not considered good practice. My interest is purely theoretical: how does the using statement behave exactly?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-17T16:17:12+00:00Added an answer on May 17, 2026 at 4:17 pm

    The book’s companion web site has more info on aborting threads here.

    In short, the first translation is correct (you can tell by looking at the IL).

    The answer to your second question is that there may be scenarios where the variable can be legitimately null. For instance, GetFoo() may return null here, in which you wouldn’t want a NullReferenceException thrown in the implicit finally block:

    using (var x = GetFoo())
    {
       ...
    }
    

    To answer your third question, the only way to make Abort safe (if you’re calling Framework code) is to tear down the AppDomain afterward. This is actually a practical solution in many cases (it’s exactly what LINQPad does whenever you cancel a running query).

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