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In the two following snippets, is the first one safe or must you do the second one?

By safe I mean is each thread guaranteed to call the method on the Foo from the same loop iteration in which the thread was created?

Or must you copy the reference to a new variable "local" to each iteration of the loop?

var threads = new List<Thread>();
foreach (Foo f in ListOfFoo)
{      
    Thread thread = new Thread(() => f.DoSomething());
    threads.Add(thread);
    thread.Start();
}

-

var threads = new List<Thread>();
foreach (Foo f in ListOfFoo)
{      
    Foo f2 = f;
    Thread thread = new Thread(() => f2.DoSomething());
    threads.Add(thread);
    thread.Start();
}

Update: As pointed out in Jon Skeet's answer, this doesn't have anything specifically to do with threading.

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Actually I feel it has to do with threading as if you weren't using threading, you would call the right delegate. In Jon Skeet's sample without threading, the problem is that there are 2 loops. Here's there's only one, so there should be no issue...unless you don't know exactly when the code will be executed (meaning if you use threading - Marc Gravell's answer shows that perfectly). – user276648 Dec 21 '11 at 9:28
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7 Answers

up vote 54 down vote accepted

The second is safe; the first isn't.

With foreach, the variable is declared outside the loop - i.e.

Foo f;
while(iterator.MoveNext())
{
     f = iterator.Current;
    // do something with f
}

This means that there is only 1 f in terms of the closure scope, and the threads might very likely get confused - calling the method multiple times on some instances and not at all on others. You can fix this with a second variable declaration inside the loop:

foreach(Foo f in ...) {
    Foo tmp = f;
    // do something with tmp
}

This then has a separate tmp in each closure scope, so there is no risk of this issue.

Here's a simple proof of the problem:

    static void Main()
    {
        int[] data = { 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 };
        foreach (int i in data)
        {
            new Thread(() => Console.WriteLine(i)).Start();
        }
        Console.ReadLine();
    }

Outputs (at random):

1
3
4
4
5
7
7
8
9
9

Add a temp variable and it works:

        foreach (int i in data)
        {
            int j = i;
            new Thread(() => Console.WriteLine(j)).Start();
        }

(each number once, but of course the order isn't guaranteed)

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Thank you, Marc. Nice post. – f100 Feb 4 '09 at 19:49
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Pop Catalin and Marc Gravell's answers are correct. All I want to add is a link to my article about closures (which talks about both Java and C#). Just thought it might add a bit of value.

EDIT: I think it's worth giving an example which doesn't have the unpredictability of threading. Here's a short but complete program showing both approaches. The "bad action" list prints out 10 ten times; the "good action" list counts from 0 to 9.

using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;

class Test
{
    static void Main() 
    {
        List<Action> badActions = new List<Action>();
        List<Action> goodActions = new List<Action>();
        for (int i=0; i < 10; i++)
        {
            int copy = i;
            badActions.Add(() => Console.WriteLine(i));
            goodActions.Add(() => Console.WriteLine(copy));
        }
        Console.WriteLine("Bad actions:");
        foreach (Action action in badActions)
        {
            action();
        }
        Console.WriteLine("Good actions:");
        foreach (Action action in goodActions)
        {
            action();
        }
    }
}
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1  
Thanks - I appended the question to say it's not really about threads. – f100 Feb 4 '09 at 19:50
It was also in one of the talks that you have in video on your site csharpindepth.com/Talks.aspx – rizzle Feb 4 '09 at 20:12
Yes, I seem to remember I used a threading version there, and one of the feedback suggestions was to avoid threads - it's clearer to use an example like the one above. – Jon Skeet Feb 4 '09 at 20:21
Nice to know the videos are getting watched though :) – Jon Skeet Feb 4 '09 at 20:22
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Your need to use option 2, creating a closure around a changing variable will use the value of the variable when the variable is used and not at closure creation time.

The implementation of anonymous methods in C# and its consequences (part 1)

The implementation of anonymous methods in C# and its consequences (part 2)

The implementation of anonymous methods in C# and its consequences (part 3)

Edit: to make it clear, in C# closures are "lexical closures" meaning they don't capture a variable's value but the variable itself. That means that when creating a closure to a changing variable the closure is actually a reference to the variable not a copy of it's value.

Edit2: added links to all blog posts if anyone is interested in reading about compiler internals.

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I think that goes for value and reference types. – leppie Feb 4 '09 at 17:01
feedback

This is an interesting question and it seems like we have seen people answer in all various ways. I was under the impression that the second way would be the only safe way. I whipped a real quick proof:

class Foo
{
    private int _id;
    public Foo(int id)
    {
        _id = id;
    }
    public void DoSomething()
    {
        Console.WriteLine(string.Format("Thread: {0} Id: {1}", Thread.CurrentThread.ManagedThreadId, this._id));
    }
}
class Program
{
    static void Main(string[] args)
    {
        var ListOfFoo = new List<Foo>();
        ListOfFoo.Add(new Foo(1));
        ListOfFoo.Add(new Foo(2));
        ListOfFoo.Add(new Foo(3));
        ListOfFoo.Add(new Foo(4));


        var threads = new List<Thread>();
        foreach (Foo f in ListOfFoo)
        {
            Thread thread = new Thread(() => f.DoSomething());
            threads.Add(thread);
            thread.Start();
        }
    }
}

if you run this you will see option 1 is definetly not safe.

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Thanks for the full program :) – f100 Feb 4 '09 at 20:02
feedback

Both of the examples in the original post are incorrect. Unless using a type then regardless where the variable passed into the thread is declared it will still reference the value set in the current loop. I have ran into this problem countess times and the only way I have found around this is to set your class as ICloneable and to perform a MemberWiseClone() before passing the object into the thread.

Someone please correct me if I'm wrong because I am still in search for a better solution.

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feedback

In your case, you can avoid the problem without using the copying trick by mapping your ListOfFoo to a sequence of threads:

var threads = ListOfFoo.Select(foo => new Thread(() => foo.DoSomething()));
foreach (var t in threads)
{
    t.Start();
}
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feedback
Foo f2 = f;

points to the same reference as

f

So nothing lost and nothing gained ...

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The point is that the compiler performs some magic here to lift the local variable into the scope of the implicitly created closure. The question is if the compiler understands to do this for the loop variable. The compiler is known for a few weaknesses regarding lifting so this is a good question. – Konrad Rudolph Feb 4 '09 at 16:48
It's not magic. It simply captures the environment. The problem here and with for loops, is that the capture variable gets mutated (re-assigned). – leppie Feb 4 '09 at 16:58
1  
leppie: the compiler generates code for you, and it's not easy to see in general what code this is exactly. This is the definition of compiler magic if ever there was one. – Konrad Rudolph Feb 4 '09 at 17:11
leppie: (cont'd) and since others have pointed out that code 1 is actually not enough, this example illustrates perfectly why the name "magic" is well-earned. Intuitively, the behaviour should be the same. Why isn't it? Magic. – Konrad Rudolph Feb 4 '09 at 17:12
2  
@Jon Skeet Do you mean "any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic" en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clarke%27s_three_laws :) – John Price Feb 4 '09 at 18:17
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