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I am trying to display a please wait dialog for a long running operation. The problem is since this is single threaded even though I tell the WaitScreen to display it never does. Is there a way I can change the visibility of that screen and make it display immediately? I included the Cursor call as an example. Right after I call this.Cursor, the cursor is updated immediately. This is exactly the behavior I want.

private void Button_Click(object sender, RoutedEventArgs e)
{
  this.Cursor = System.Windows.Input.Cursors.Pen;
  WaitScreen.Visibility = Visibility.Visible;

  // Do something long here
  for (Int32 i = 0; i < 100000000; i++)
  {
    String s = i.ToString();
  }

  WaitScreen.Visibility = Visibility.Collapsed;
  this.Cursor = System.Windows.Input.Cursors.Arrow; 
}

WaitScreen is just a Grid with a Z-index of 99 that I hide and show.

update: I really don't want to use a background worker unless I have to. There are a number of places in the code where this start and stop will occur.

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I was the same when I was trying to do it single threaded. Thinking, lets just change the cursor. But it never really worked. – Ray Mar 5 '09 at 21:19

3 Answers

Doing it single threaded really is going to be a pain, and it'll never work as you'd like. The window will eventually go black in WPF, and the program will change to "Not Responding".

I would recommending using a BackgroundWorker to do your long running task.

It's not that complicated. Something like this would work.

private void DoWork(object sender, DoWorkEventArgs e)
{
    //Do the long running process
}

private void WorkerCompleted(object sender, RunWorkerCompletedEventArgs e)
{
    //Hide your wait dialog
}

private void StartWork()
{
   //Show your wait dialog
   BackgroundWorker worker = new BackgroundWorker();
   worker.DoWork += DoWork;
   worker.RunWorkerCompleted += WorkerCompleted;
   worker.RunWorkerAsync();
}

You can then look at the ProgressChanged event to display a progress if you like (remember to set WorkerReportsProgress to true). You can also pass a parameter to RunWorkerAsync if your DoWork methods needs an object (available in e.Argument).

This really is the simplest way, rather than trying to do it singled threaded.

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Thanks for the answer. I found a way to do it on the UI thread (See answer). In a perfect world BackgroundWorker is definitely the way to go. I just don't have the luxury of changing that much code at this time. – Shaun Bowe Mar 5 '09 at 21:23
up vote 9 down vote accepted

I found a way! Thanks to this thread.

public static void ForceUIToUpdate()
{
  DispatcherFrame frame = new DispatcherFrame();

  Dispatcher.CurrentDispatcher.BeginInvoke(DispatcherPriority.Render, new DispatcherOperationCallback(delegate(object parameter)
  {
    frame.Continue = false;
    return null;
  }), null);

  Dispatcher.PushFrame(frame);
}

That function needs to be called right before the long running operation. That will then Force the UI thread to update.

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Another option is to write your long-running routine as a function that returns IEnumerable<double> to indicate progress, and just say:

yield return 30;

That would indicate 30% of the way through, for example. You can then use a WPF timer to execute it in the "background" as a co-operative coroutine.

It's described in some detail here, with sample code.

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