Task (gb)
Depuis 3.3
This virtual class aims at being the parent class of all background tasks.
Cette classe n'est pas instanciable.
Propriétés
Handle
|
Return the background task process id.
|
Running
|
Returns whether the task is running or not.
|
Value
|
Returns the value returned by the background task.
|
Méthodes
Kill
|
A synonymous of the Stop method.
|
Stop
|
Abort the background task.
|
Wait
|
Wait for the background task's termination.
|
Evénements
Error
|
This event is raised when the background task prints something on its error output.
|
Kill
|
This event is raised when the task terminates.
|
Read
|
This event is raised when the background task prints something on its standard output.
|
How does it work?
To run a task in the background:
-
You must create a class that inherits Task.
-
That class must have a public "Main" method that takes no argument.
-
You must instantiate the class to start a new task.
-
Then the
Main
method will be automatically run in the background at the next call of the event loop.
The
Main
method is run by a fork. It can access every other part of the
program, except that the parent process will not see any change done by the task.
Many components will not like being forked. Especially the GUI ones.
Hopefully, Gambas tries to be as nice as possible with them in that case. But be careful anyway.
Sending arguments to the task
To send arguments to the task, just define some public variables in it, and fill them
before the task starts.
Alternatively you an use the tasks
_new( ... ) method to pass the arguments when you instantiate it.
Receiving a result from the task
The
Main
method can return any value that will be sent to the parent process through
a serialization/deserialization internal process.
The value can be any value that you can use with the
WRITE instruction.
The parent process just has to read the
Value property to get that return value.
Task standard outputs
The task standard output (
PRINT instruction) and error output (
ERROR instruction) are
automatically redirected, and the parent process will get them through the
Read and
Error events.
Task errors
If something bad happens during the task execution, the parent process can learn about it by reading
the
Value property, because an error event will be raised. The error message will, hopefully, explain the problem.
Task priority
To lower the priority of a task, use the
Application.Priority property.