I've been using Progress<T>
and wondered if it can be replaced by Action<T>
.
In the code below, using each of them for reporting progress, i.e. ReportWithProgress()
or ReportWithAction()
, didn't make any noticeable difference to me. How progressBar1
increased, how the strings were written on the output window, they seemed the same.
// WinForm application with progressBar1
private void HeavyIO()
{
Thread.Sleep(20); // assume heavy IO
}
private async Task ReportWithProgress()
{
IProgress<int> p = new Progress<int>(i => progressBar1.Value = i);
for (int i = 0; i <= 100; i++)
{
await Task.Run(() => HeavyIO());
Console.WriteLine("Progress : " + i);
p.Report(i);
}
}
private async Task ReportWithAction()
{
var a = new Action<int>(i => progressBar1.Value = i);
for (int i = 0; i <= 100; i++)
{
await Task.Run(() => HeavyIO());
Console.WriteLine("Action : " + i);
a(i);
}
}
But Progress<T>
can't be a reinvention of the wheel. There should be a reason why it was implemented. Googling "c# Progress vs Action" didn't give me much help. How is Progress different from Action?
HeavyIO
toasync Task HeavyIO() { await Task.Delay(20); }
so that at least you are invoking a TaskProgress<T>
calls the action in the context in which it was constructed which allows you to interact with the UI without annoying invocation code.Progress
and how did that fail to answer your question?progressBar1.Value = i
from a different thread results in the dreaded "cross-thread operation not valid" exception.Progress<T>
is a class, whileAction<T>
is merely a delegate.