25

I'm trying to iterate all files in a directory using GetFilesAsync, but every time I call the GetResults method, it throws an exception that says

System.InvalidOperationException: A method was called at an unexpected time

The code is simply

var files = myStorageFolder.GetFilesAsync(); //runs fine
var results = files.GetResults(); //throws the exception

I'm new to Win 8 dev so I might be missing something obvious.

Edit (solved) I'm running my console application, but now that the program runs async, the files.GetResult() method no longer exists.

static void Main(string[] args)
{
   var files = GetFiles(myStorageFolder);
   var results = files.GetAwaiter().GetResults();//Need to add GetAwaiter()
}

static async Task GetFiles(StorageFolder sf)
{
   await sf.GetFilesAsync();
}

4 Answers 4

40

If you don't want to use the asynckeyword (in my case, the code was inside a property, so asyncwasn't an option), you can use a TaskAwaiter instead, by chaining these two methods:

var folder = Package.Current.InstalledLocation.GetFolderAsync("folderName").GetAwaiter().GetResult();

This won't throw a InvalidOperationException nor cause a deadlock.

4
  • 1
    Do I need any Using statements to use the GetAwaiter method?
    – User1
    Nov 24, 2016 at 9:45
  • 1
    @user1 I can't remember, this is from 2 years ago. But looking through the docs, this is the extension method you need: WindowsRuntimeSystemExtensions.GetAwaiter. It's defined in the System namespace, so you probably have it in scope already
    – dcastro
    Nov 24, 2016 at 11:14
  • 7
    I noticed the GetAwaiter() was on a Task and I was trying to use it on an IAwaitableOperation so I had to call AsTask then Results, damn UWP. Thanks though!
    – User1
    Nov 24, 2016 at 11:17
  • This also solves the issue when in an if statement as well. I was receiving the error when I just ran the application, but not if I placed a breakpoint just before the if statement and used Step Into to run through the if statement. if(ApplicationData.Current.LocalFolder.TryGetItemAsync("savedFavorites.xml").GetAwaiter().GetResult() == null)
    – Keven M
    Mar 14, 2019 at 16:15
13

You need to wait for the async method to complete. So you could use the new await as one option:

var files = await myStorageFolder.GetFilesAsync();

You might want to check the documentation on dealing with async methods here.

0
1

you should await the var files = myStorageFolder.GetFilesAsync(); as the operation might still be running when you get to next instruction var results = files.GetResults(); //throws the exception

var files = await myStorageFolder.GetFilesAsync(); //runs fine
var results = files.GetResults(); //this will run when call above returns
0
1

If you are using an variation of Task like Windows.Foundation.IAsyncOperation the code can be like this:

var file = StorageFile.GetFileFromPathAsync(protocolArgs.Uri.LocalPath).AsTask().Result;

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