I just want to learn both and how to use them together. I understand that they can complement each other I just could not find an example of someone actually doing it.
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2SO is best for specific questions how to do something. “Give me an example of X” doesn't fit that very well.– svickJul 8, 2012 at 15:04
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Ok, you are right about the form of the question but i think the issue is still valid. Maybe "How to use them in combination to effectively exploit the features from both?" is more appropriate.– naeron84Jul 8, 2012 at 17:24
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@naeron84 Would it be sufficient to look at a combined C#-async + Rx example?– GregCJul 10, 2012 at 15:29
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@GregC Actually I want to use f# but async is not related to TPL Dataflow blocks at least not explicitly.– naeron84Jul 10, 2012 at 19:00
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1@svick The problems involving parallelism and asynchronity. What happens if i mix them together and stuff like that. I'm staring to think that the question is to trivial or to hard or pointless and I'm not getting something very basic :)– naeron84Jul 10, 2012 at 21:48
1 Answer
Let me start with a bit of background.
The .NET framework has a number of special types - either proper classes or interfaces - Task<T>
, IObservable<T>
, Nullable<T>
, IEnumerable<T>
, Lazy<T>
, etc - that provide special powers to the underlying type T
.
The TPL uses Task<T>
to represent asynchronous computation of a single value of T
.
Rx uses IObservable<T>
to represent asynchronous computation of zero or more values of T
.
It's the "asynchronous computation" aspect of both of these that bring TPL and Rx together.
Now, the TPL also uses the type Task
to represent the asynchronous execution of an Action
lambda, but this can be considered a special case of Task<T>
where T
is void
. Very much like a standard method in c# returns void
like so:
public void MyMethod() { }
Rx also allow for the same special case with use of a special type called Unit
.
The difference between the TPL and Rx is in the number of values returned. TPL is one and only one whereas Rx is zero or more.
So, if you treat Rx in a special way by only working with observable sequences that return a single value you can do some computations in a similar way to the TPL.
For example, in the TPL I could write:
Task.Factory
.StartNew(() => "Hello")
.ContinueWith(t => Console.WriteLine(t.Result));
And in Rx the equivalent would be:
Observable
.Start(() => "Hello")
.Subscribe(x => Console.WriteLine(x));
I could go one step further in Rx by specifying that the TPL should be used to execute the computation like so:
Observable
.Start(() => "Hello", Scheduler.TaskPool)
.Subscribe(x => Console.WriteLine(x));
(By default the Thread Pool is used.)
Now I could do some "mixing and matching". If I add a reference to the System.Reactive.Threading.Tasks
namespace I can move between tasks and observables quite easily.
Task.Factory
.StartNew(() => "Hello")
.ToObservable()
.Subscribe(x => Console.WriteLine(x));
Observable
.Start(() => "Hello")
.ToTask()
.ContinueWith(t => Console.WriteLine(t.Result));
Notice the ToObservable()
& .ToTask()
calls and the resulting flips from one library to the other.
If I have an observable that returns more than one value I can use the observable .ToArray()
extension method to turn multiple sequence values into a single array value that can be turned into a task. Like so:
Observable
.Interval(TimeSpan.FromSeconds(1.0))
.Take(5) // is IObservable<long>
.ToArray()
.ToTask() // is Task<long[]>
.ContinueWith(t => Console.WriteLine(t.Result.Length));
I think this is a fairly basic answer to your question. Is it what you were expecting?
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21TPL Dataflow is a very different library from TPL, so I don't feel the answer does not precisely address the question. The discussion was, however, noteworthy, so +1.– GregCJul 10, 2012 at 15:17
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2Sorry but as GregC stated before i need an example involving TPL Dataflow not "just" TPL. What I want is to combine TPL Dataflow blocks and with Rx.– naeron84Jul 10, 2012 at 18:59
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My apologies - I did not know about
DataFlow
. Sorry I haven't answered your question. Jul 11, 2012 at 1:18 -
1@svick - The lack of
Task<void>
is whatIObservable<Unit>
is meant to represent. Could you not useTask<Unit>
for the same thing asTask<void>
? Jul 11, 2012 at 1:19