Is there a MS "best practice" or contract agreement when implementing a method that returns a Task in regards to throwing exceptions? This came up when writing unit tests and I was trying to figure out if I should to test/handle this condition (I recognize that the answer could be "defensive coding", but I don't want that to be the answer).
i.e.
Method must always return a Task, which should contain the thrown Exception.
Method must always return a Task, except when the method supplies invalid arguments (i.e. ArgumentException).
Method must always return a Task, except when the developer goes rogue and does what he/she wants (jk).
Task Foo1Async(string id){
if(id == null){
throw new ArgumentNullException();
}
// do stuff
}
Task Foo2Async(string id){
if(id == null){
var source = new TaskCompletionSource<bool>();
source.SetException(new ArgumentNullException());
return source.Task;
}
// do stuff
}
Task Bar(string id){
// argument checking
if(id == null) throw new ArgumentNullException("id")
try{
return this.SomeService.GetAsync(id).ContinueWith(t => {
// checking for Fault state here
// pass exception through.
})
}catch(Exception ex){
// handling more Fault state here.
// defensive code.
// return Task with Exception.
var source = new TaskCompletionSource<bool>();
source.SetException(ex);
return source.Task;
}
}
async
, as that is an implementation detail not visible to the caller. If you agree with that, then either the two cases should be treated as equivalent, or you should never synchronously throw exceptions.