20

Is the asynchronous implementation in C# 4.5 exactly the same as in F# 2 in the way threads are used?

1 Answer 1

28

They are different. The main difference is that C# uses standard .NET Task<T> to represent asynchronous computations while F# uses its own type called Async<T>.

More specifically, the key differences are:

  • A C# async method creates a Task<T> that is immediately started (hot task model) while F# creates a computation that you have to start explicitly (generator model). This means that F# computations are easier to compose (you can write higher level abstractions).

  • In F# you also get better control over how is the computation started. You can start a computation using Async.Start to start it in the background or Async.StartImmediate to start it on the current thread.

  • F# asynchronous workflows support cancellation automatically, so you do not have to pass CancellationToken around.

  • Perhaps another consequence of the first point is that F# async workflows also support tail-recursion, so you can write recursive workflows (this would not work easily in C#, but C# does not use this programming style)

I wrote a more detailed article about this topic: Asynchronous C# and F# (II.): How do they differ?

2
  • 1
    Thanks a lot! But how are threads used under the hood? Don Syme points out in his book 'Expert F#' that F# uses thread hopping. Is this the same for C# or are there some differences?
    – Andries
    Oct 3, 2012 at 12:57
  • 8
    In F#, when you start on a thread with specific SynchronizationContext (i.e. the GUI thread) then the asynchronous computation jumps back to this SynchronizationContext. I could not find a documentation saying how this behaves in C#, but my experiments show that it behaves the same - that is, if you start awaiting on a GUI thread, then the rest of your computation will run on th GUI thread (even if the computaiton you're awaiting runs the continuation on another thread). Oct 3, 2012 at 13:18

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.