Thread.Sleep()
causes the current thread to sleep, so that thread won't be doing anything again until it's done sleeping (unless you interrupt it or something).
So, if you do it like that, you just need more threads.
var scheduleLoopAction = new Action<int, int, string>((int hour, int minute, string processName) =>
{
while (true)
{
var now = DateTime.Now;
var schedule = new DateTime(now.Year, now.Month, now.Day, hour, minute, 00);
if (schedule < now) schedule = schedule.AddDays(1);
System.Threading.Thread.Sleep(schedule.Subtract(now));
System.Diagnostics.Process.Start(processName);
}
});
((new System.Threading.Thread(() => { scheduleLoopAction(4, 0, "sample.exe"); }))).Start();
((new System.Threading.Thread(() => { scheduleLoopAction(1, 0, "sample2.exe"); }))).Start();
This probably isn't the best way accomplish the goal, but I figured that you'd wanted something like what was in the question.
Note that the thread calls don't block, so this method will finish right away (unlike the sample in the question, which'll go forever). If you want it to block, you can just have the last schedule run in the current thread, e.g.
((new System.Threading.Thread(() => { scheduleLoopAction(4, 0, "sample.exe"); }))).Start();
scheduleLoopAction(1, 0, "sample2.exe"); // Runs in current thread