I am using to check the condition of a thread with if(Thread.IsAlive)
. A form is running in this thread. At times during execution, even though the form remains open, the call to Thread.IsAlive seems to be evaluating to false. I thought to perform the same check with if(Thread.ThreadState==ThreadState.Running)
. Is it the right way to do? If not, what is the possible work around?
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@daveL : even i hate it when i say it seems to behave like this. But the problem is that I can see the form that is running on that thread on my desktop, yet thread.isalive code is not getting executed.– Victor MukherjeeCommented Apr 26, 2013 at 13:07
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1Seems like @daveL has a hard time dealing with ambiguity, at least it seems that way... :p– kingdangoCommented Nov 22, 2013 at 15:00
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1 Answer
msdn Thread.IsAlive Property true if this thread has been started and has not terminated normally or aborted; otherwise, false.
msdn Thread.ThreadState
- Running
The thread has been started, it is not blocked, and there is no pending ThreadAbortException. - StopRequested
- SuspendRequested
- Background
- Unstarted
- WaitSleepJoin
- Suspended
- AbortRequested
I think now it's clear Running
is not the same as IsAlive
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7IsAlive is mostly useful when you're starting a thread. if(!thread.IsAlive) thread.Start(); It's not a safe way to see if a thread is RUNNING because there are many states between NOT STARTED and STARTED that aren't equal to RUNNING. IsAlive really just tells you not to try to start it again. Commented Nov 22, 2013 at 15:02
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3Is it a safe way to periodically check to make sure the thread has not exited ? Commented Mar 7, 2015 at 14:09
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Suspended no longer appears to be a valid threadstate. Can anyone recommend an alternative? Commented Nov 1, 2017 at 13:24