问题
Is there a easy way to perform a method after a given delay like in iOS out of the box?
On iPhone I would do this:
[self performSelector:@selector(connectSensor) withObject:nil afterDelay:2.5];
It will then schedule the method connectSensor
on the main thread (UI thread) to be executed after 2,5 seconds. And because it is automatically scheduled on the main thread, you don't have to worry about cross thread issues. (There is also a performSelectorOnBackground
version)
So how would I do this properly in WP7?
Currently I'm accomplishing this with a timer, but I'm not sure if this is a good solution.
private Timer timer;
private void DoSomethingAfterDaly()
{
// ... do something here
timer = new Timer( (o) => Deployment.Current.Dispatcher.BeginInvoke(() => NavigationService.GoBack()), null, 2500, Timeout.Infinite);
}
How could this be encapsulated into an extension method so I can just call this.Perform(MyMethod, null, 2500);
?
回答1:
You can use a BackgroundWorker like so:
private void Perform(Action myMethod, int delayInMilliseconds)
{
BackgroundWorker worker = new BackgroundWorker();
worker.DoWork += (s, e) => Thread.Sleep(delayInMilliseconds);
worker.RunWorkerCompleted += (s, e) => myMethod.Invoke();
worker.RunWorkerAsync();
}
The call into this method would look like this:
this.Perform(() => MyMethod(), 2500);
The background worker will run the sleep on a thread off of the UI thread so your application is free to do other things while the delay is occurring.
回答2:
You can use the Reactive Extensions for WP7 to observe on a timer:
Observable
.Timer(TimeSpan.FromMilliseconds(2500))
.SubscribeOnDispatcher()
.Subscribe(_ =>
{
NavigationService.GoBack();
});
Given the brevity of this code, I don't think you'd gain much by creating an extension method for it :) For more information about the Reactive Extensions for WP7, take a look at this MSDN page .
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/4726239/easy-way-to-excecute-method-after-a-given-delay