Is there a benefit to using the async/await pattern when you are running things in a synchronous manner?
For instance in my app I have static methods that are called by cron (hangfire) to do various IO bound tasks. A simple contrived example is this:
static void Run(string[] args)
{
var data = Test(args);
//..do stuff with returned data
}
public static List<string> Test(string[] args)
{
return Db.Select(args);
}
Is there any advantage to writing this code like so:
static void Run(string[] args)
{
var dataTask = await TestAsync(args);
dataTask.Wait();
//..do stuff with returned data
}
public static async Task<List<string>> TestAsync(string[] args)
{
return await Db.SelectAsync(args);
}
My colleague tells me that I should always use this pattern and use async methods if they are available as it adds under the hood optimization but he is unable to explain why that is and I can't really find any clear cut explanation.
If I write my code with this type of pattern in my static methods it ends up looking like:
var data = someMethod();
data.Wait();
var data2 = someOtherMethod(data);
data2.Wait();
I understand using async await pattern when firing up lots of concurrent tasks but when the code originates from a static method and has to run in order like this is there any benefit at all? Which way should I write it?
await
andWait()
in production code? If so, why?