2

Problem:

BeginInvoke executes code on main thread while this thread is also stuck on a modal window.

The code: [Attached below]

  • I have a button that its "Click" opens the FolderBrowserDialog window
  • I have fileWatcherSystem to watch for a file.
  • "onChanged" method is the method that being called when the file is changed. [it is called on another thread]
  • In "onChanged" I use beginInvoke to call a function on the main UI thread, this function shows a messageBox.

The flow:

  1. When application starts, it starts watching a certain file using the FileSystemWatcher class
  2. Later, the users clicks on the button and the application opens the "FolderBrowserDialog" window (this window is modal)
  3. While the FolderBrowserDialog" window is still open (modal), the user changes the watched file using external editor [notepad for example]
  4. The OnChanged callback is called and executes System.Windows.Application.Current.Dispatcher.BeginInvoke (new Action(() => showMsg())); to call showMsg on the main thread that is still stuck on a modal dialog.

The problem:

showMsg is called on the main thread although it is still stuck on FolderBrowserDialog which is still open and modal.

Question:

Why showMsg is called immediately and not after FolderBrowserDialog is closed (after user will pick a folder) ? I want showMsg to be called when the modal dialog is closed.

Any idea will be appreciated, thanks alot!!

MainWindow.CS

public partial class MainWindow : Window
{

    public MainWindow()
    {
        InitializeComponent();
        int threadIDMain = System.Threading.Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId;
        CreateFileWatcher(@"C:\temp", @"myFile.txt"); // directory path + file name
    }

    private FileSystemWatcher Watcher; 

    public void CreateFileWatcher(string directoryPath, string fileName)
    {
        Watcher = new FileSystemWatcher();
        Watcher.Path = directoryPath;
        Watcher.NotifyFilter = NotifyFilters.LastWrite;
        Watcher.Filter = fileName;
        Watcher.Changed += new FileSystemEventHandler(OnChanged);
        Watcher.EnableRaisingEvents = true;
    }

    private void OnChanged(object source, FileSystemEventArgs e) // called when the watched file is changed , this is called on a different thread
    {
        int threadIDChanged = System.Threading.Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId;
        System.Windows.Application.Current.Dispatcher.BeginInvoke(new Action(() => showMsg())); // calling "showMsg" on main thread
    }

    private void showMsg()
    {
        int threadIDshowMsg = System.Threading.Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId;
        MessageBox.Show("showMsg: Here I am in thread ID: " + threadIDshowMsg); // same thread as main thread
    }


    private void Button_Click_1(object sender, RoutedEventArgs e)
    {
        using (System.Windows.Forms.FolderBrowserDialog dlg = new System.Windows.Forms.FolderBrowserDialog())
        {
            int threadIDClick = System.Threading.Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId;

            dlg.ShowNewFolderButton = true;
            dlg.Description = "Opened from thread Id " + threadIDClick;
            System.Windows.Forms.DialogResult resultFileDialog = dlg.ShowDialog();
            if (resultFileDialog == System.Windows.Forms.DialogResult.OK)
            {
                //handle this.
            }
        }
    }
}

XAML :

<Grid>
    <Button Content="click to open file browser dialog" Height="50"  Click="Button_Click_1"/>
</Grid>
1
  • You just have the wrong mental model of what ShowDialog() is intended to do. It solves re-entrancy problems by disabling the user interface, the thread most certainly is not stuck. You'll simply have to avoid using a message box. May 5, 2015 at 14:34

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