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c# - Fire and Forget approach

Related to this answer,

If I truly do want to "Fire and Forget" a method that does return a task, and (for simplicity) let's assume that the method isn't expected to throw any exceptions. I can use the extension method listed in the answer:

public static void Forget(this Task task)
{
}

Using this approach, if there are bugs in action of the Task that cause an exception to be thrown then when the unexpected exception is thrown, the exception will be swallowed and go unnoticed.

Question: Wouldn't it be more appropriate in this scenario for the extension method to be of the form:

public static async void Forget(this Task task)
{
    await task;
}

So that programming errors throw an exception and get escalated (usually bringing down the process).

In the case of a method with expected (and ignorable) exceptions, the method would need to become more elaborate (as an aside, any suggestions on how to construct a version of this method that would take a list of acceptable and ignorable exception types?)

question from:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/22864367/fire-and-forget-approach

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It depends on the semantics you want. If you want to ensure exceptions are noticed, then yes, you could await the task. But in that case it's not truly "fire and forget".

A true "fire and forget" - in the sense that you don't care about when it completes or whether it completes successfully or with error - is extremely rare.

Edit:

For handling exceptions:

public static async void Forget(this Task task, params Type[] acceptableExceptions)
{
  try
  {
    await task.ConfigureAwait(false);
  }
  catch (Exception ex)
  {
    // TODO: consider whether derived types are also acceptable.
    if (!acceptableExceptions.Contains(ex.GetType()))
      throw;
  }
}

Note that I recommend using await instead of ContinueWith. ContinueWith has a surprising default scheduler (as noted on my blog) and Task.Exception will wrap the actual exception in an AggregateException, making the error handling code more cumbersome.


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