I have a XAML form that I would like two independent features threaded out of the main XAML execution thread: 1.) a timer control that ticks up, and 2.) implement a pause button so I can freeze a set of procedural set of activities and clicking on the pause button again will resume.
When I start the form, the entire app freezes. Because of this I can't interact with btnPause control. I got the timer class to work, but it (lblTimer) updates in chunks, or whenver it looks like the CPU isn't busy on the main thread.
I tried to create a class "Task" that wraps a class or method in its own thread so I can control.
Automation.Task AutomationThread = new Automation.Task();
Automation.Task TimerThread = new Automation.Task();
Later on, I attempted to create a stopwatch class and assign the TimerThread to it so I can manage it independently.
Automation.WatchTimer stopwatch = new Automation.WatchTimer(lblTimer, TimerThread);
class Task
{
private ManualResetEvent _shutdownFlag = new ManualResetEvent(false);
private ManualResetEvent _pauseFlag = new ManualResetEvent(true);
Thread _thread;
public Task() { }
public void Start()
{
_thread = new Thread(DoWork);
_thread.Start();
}
public void Resume()
{
_pauseFlag.Set();
}
public void Stop()
{
_shutdownFlag.Set();
_pauseFlag.Set();
_thread.Join();
}
public void DoWork()
{
do
{
_pauseFlag.WaitOne(Timeout.Infinite);
}
while (!_shutdownFlag.WaitOne(0));
}
// I AM NOT SURE IF THIS IS THE RIGHT APPROACH
public void DoWork(Func<void> method????)
{
do
{
// NOT SURE WHAT TO PUT HERE
// This is where I want it to do a method
// that wraps a long chain of procedural items
// where I can pause (block) and unpause through the UI
}
while (!_shutdownFlag.WaitOne(0));
}
class WatchTimer
{
public WatchTimer(System.Windows.Controls.Label lbl, Automation.Task worker)
{
lblField = lbl;
worker.Start();
}
private System.Windows.Controls.Label lblField;
Timer time = new Timer();
Stopwatch sw = new Stopwatch();
public void Start()
{
time.Start();
sw.Start();
time.Tick += new EventHandler(time_Tick);
}
public void Stop()
{
time.Stop();
sw.Stop();
}
public void Reset()
{
sw.Reset();
lblField.Content = this.elapsedTime();
}
public string elapsedTime()
{
TimeSpan ts = sw.Elapsed;
// return formatted TimeSpan value
return String.Format("{0:00}:{1:00}:{2:00}.{3:00}",
ts.Hours, ts.Minutes, ts.Seconds, ts.Milliseconds);
}
private void time_Tick(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
lblField.Content = this.elapsedTime();
}
}
The timer appears to work, but it still spits updates in chunks - does this mean it's not on its own thread?