48  
bestpractices
Поиск  
Always will be ready notify the world about expectations as easy as possible: job change page
Aug 9, 2021

How getting Lazy in C#

Автор:
MBARK T3STO
Источник:
Просмотров:
1904

If you’re anything like me, you’ve looked for ways of making your applications faster. In this article, I’ll show you a somewhat unknown class in the .NET framework that makes lazy creation of objects easy to do and thread safe.

The Old Way

Before we get to the fun stuff, let’s take a look at how you might try to do these things without .NET’s Lazy<T> classes.

Typically when you design a class, you might start with code like this:

You might eventually find that as the number of things you need to instantiate grows, the performance degrades significantly on creation of the object.

In that case, you might make a decision to lazy load components of the Starship class. That is, you might make a decision to only instantiate them when they’re needed.

A typical version of that would look like this:

Lots of lines there. Thankfully, this can be compressed a bit:

Well, that’s at least concise, though it might not be extremely easy to read.

Both the expanded and the concise version of this do have a threading issue, however.

If two callers are trying to get a property, it’s possible that one might get past the null check and then its thread sleeps while another thread also passes that null check. In this case, two instances of ExpensiveWarpCore are created and then assigned to _warpCore. This may be a non-issue, or it may be significant.

In order to fully work around this limitation, you need to do something like the following:

While this is technically safer, you can start to see how doing this several times over in your class as you introduce new lazy-loaded properties would become tedious and make people tend to skim the code.

Introducing Lazy<T>

.NET provides a generic class called Lazy which allows you to lazily instantiate objects the first time their value is requested.

Let’s take a look at the same code using Lazy<T>:

Interestingly, we moved the complexity out of the property getter and put it in the backing field.

Let’s take a look at that lazy initializer:

new Lazy<WarpCore>(() => new ExpensiveWarpCore(), true)

First, we’re invoking the constructor on Lazy and providing a generic type argument telling the class that it will provide a WarpCore instance.

Next, we pass in a Func<WarpCore> argument that is invoked to create the instance we need. In this case, we’re just calling the ExpensiveWarpCore constructor. Note that if we were just invoking the default constructor on WarpCore instead of ExpensiveWarpCore, we wouldn’t even need to specify this Func value.

Finally, we’re passing in a true boolean value to the final parameter indicating that this instance should be thread safe.

Closing Thoughts

You can see in just a few lines how you can use Lazy<T> to safely and concisely instantiate objects exactly when they’re first used, and can do so in a thread safe manner if you choose to.

As with anything, there are tradeoffs to using Lazy. Primarily, these tradeoffs involve syntax which may be hard to read for newer developers.

All in all, Lazy is something I would strongly recommend adding to your standard practices. The downsides are minimal and the ability to standardize on simple patterns is a big win.

Похожее
Jan 29
Author: Alex Maher
Performance tricks & best practices, beginner friendly Hey there! Today, I’m sharing some straightforward ways to speed up your .NET Core apps. No fancy words, just simple stuff that works. Let’s dive in! • • • 1. Asynchronous programming Asynchronous...
Jun 13
Author: Dayanand Thombare
Creating background services in .NET Core is a powerful way to perform long-running, background tasks that are independent of user interaction. These tasks can range from data processing, sending batch emails, to file I/O operations — all critical for today’s...
Oct 20, 2022
Author: Vishal Yelve
ASP.NET Core MVC is a web development framework, widely used by developers around the word, to develop web applications. These web applications have proven to be vulnerable to attacks from different sources, though, and it is our responsibility to safeguard...
Apr 16, 2022
Author: Matthew MacDonald
Sometimes it’s the little things that count. When .NET 6 dropped this November, a few top-line items grabbed all the attention. I’m talking about C# 10, hot reload, Blazor’s AOT compilation, and some serious inner loop performance improvements. All of...
Написать сообщение
Тип
Почта
Имя
*Сообщение