3

If I have an async method :

public async Task MyMethodAsync()
{
   // [.. Some synchronous code here ..]

   await AnotherAsyncMethod();
}

And at some point in my code I call it like that :

await MyMethodAsync();

Will this statement immediately return to the caller without even entering the MyMehodAsync ? I guess so but not sure.

If I want the call to MyMethodAsync to first execute the [.. Some synchronous code here ..] part immediately, should I rather do :

var t = MyMethodAsync(); 
await t;                 

Thanks

2 Answers 2

5

When your code calls

await MyMethodAsync();

then execution will enter MyMethodAsync (synchronously). The method only "pauses" when/if MyMethodAsync returns an uncompleted Task.

You may find my async/await intro post helpful.

1
  • 1
    Key explanation here is: "The method only "pauses" when/if MyMethodAsync returns an uncompleted Task." The await keyword does not do this alone and totally had me thrown off.
    – atconway
    Oct 8, 2013 at 19:17
3
[.. Some synchronous code here ..] 

will execute synchronously until the first await yields control. You're doing it right. Your last example is exactly the same as your previous in terms of what gets executed synchronously.

0

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