Concurrency in C# Cookbook: Asynchronous, Parallel, and Multithreaded Programming


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Description

If you're one of many developers still uncertain about concurrent and multithreaded development, this practical cookbook will change your mind. With more than 85 code-rich recipes in this updated second edition, author Stephen Cleary demonstrates parallel processing and asynchronous programming techniques using libraries and language features in .NET and C# 8.0.

Concurrency is now more common in responsive and scalable application development, but it's still extremely difficult to code. The detailed solutions in this cookbook show you how modern tools raise the level of abstraction, making concurrency much easier than before. Complete with ready-to-use code and discussions about how and why solutions work, these recipes help you:

  • Get up to speed on concurrency and async and parallel programming
  • Use async and await for asynchronous operations
  • Enhance your code with asynchronous streams
  • Explore parallel programming with .NET's Task Parallel Library
  • Create dataflow pipelines with .NET's TPL Dataflow library
  • Understand the capabilities that System.Reactive builds on top of LINQ
  • Utilize threadsafe and immutable collections
  • Learn how to conduct unit testing with concurrent code
  • Make the thread pool work for you
  • Enable clean, cooperative cancellation
  • Examine scenarios for combining concurrent approaches
  • Dive into asynchronous-friendly object-oriented programming
  • Recognize and write adapters for code using older asynchronous styles


Author: Stephen Cleary
Publisher: O'Reilly Media
Published: 09/17/2019
Pages: 254
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.90lbs
Size: 9.19h x 7.00w x 0.53d
ISBN13: 9781492054504
ISBN10: 149205450X
BISAC Categories:
- Computers | Languages | C#
- Computers | Programming | Object Oriented
- Computers | Programming | Parallel

About the Author

Stephen Cleary is a developer with extensive experience ranging from ARM firmware to Azure. He has contributed to open source from the very beginning, starting with the Boost C++ libraries, and has released several libraries and utilities of his own.