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Procédure : parcourir un arbre binaire avec des tâches parallèles

L’exemple suivant montre deux façons d’utiliser des tâches parallèles pour parcourir une arborescence de données. La création de l’arborescence en soi est considérée comme un exercice.

Exemple

public class TreeWalk
{
    static void Main()
    {
        Tree<MyClass> tree = new Tree<MyClass>();

        // ...populate tree (left as an exercise)

        // Define the Action to perform on each node.
        Action<MyClass> myAction = x => Console.WriteLine("{0} : {1}", x.Name, x.Number);

        // Traverse the tree with parallel tasks.
        DoTree(tree, myAction);
    }

    public class MyClass
    {
        public string Name { get; set; }
        public int Number { get; set; }
    }
    public class Tree<T>
    {
        public Tree<T> Left;
        public Tree<T> Right;
        public T Data;
    }

    // By using tasks explicitly.
    public static void DoTree<T>(Tree<T> tree, Action<T> action)
    {
        if (tree == null) return;
        var left = Task.Factory.StartNew(() => DoTree(tree.Left, action));
        var right = Task.Factory.StartNew(() => DoTree(tree.Right, action));
        action(tree.Data);

        try
        {
            Task.WaitAll(left, right);
        }
        catch (AggregateException )
        {
            //handle exceptions here
        }
    }

    // By using Parallel.Invoke
    public static void DoTree2<T>(Tree<T> tree, Action<T> action)
    {
        if (tree == null) return;
        Parallel.Invoke(
            () => DoTree2(tree.Left, action),
            () => DoTree2(tree.Right, action),
            () => action(tree.Data)
        );
    }
}

Imports System.Threading.Tasks

Public Class TreeWalk

    Shared Sub Main()

        Dim tree As Tree(Of Person) = New Tree(Of Person)()

        ' ...populate tree (left as an exercise)

        ' Define the Action to perform on each node.
        Dim myAction As Action(Of Person) = New Action(Of Person)(Sub(x)
                                                                      Console.WriteLine("{0}  : {1} ", x.Name, x.Number)
                                                                  End Sub)

        ' Traverse the tree with parallel tasks.
        DoTree(tree, myAction)
    End Sub

    Public Class Person
        Public Name As String
        Public Number As Integer
    End Class

    Public Class Tree(Of T)
        Public Left As Tree(Of T)
        Public Right As Tree(Of T)
        Public Data As T
    End Class

    ' By using tasks explicitly.
    Public Shared Sub DoTree(Of T)(ByVal myTree As Tree(Of T), ByVal a As Action(Of T))
        If myTree Is Nothing Then
            Return
        End If
        Dim left = Task.Factory.StartNew(Sub() DoTree(myTree.Left, a))
        Dim right = Task.Factory.StartNew(Sub() DoTree(myTree.Right, a))
        a(myTree.Data)

        Try
            Task.WaitAll(left, right)
        Catch ae As AggregateException
            'handle exceptions here
        End Try
    End Sub

    ' By using Parallel.Invoke
    Public Shared Sub DoTree2(Of T)(ByVal myTree As Tree(Of T), ByVal myAct As Action(Of T))
        If myTree Is Nothing Then
            Return
        End If
        Parallel.Invoke(
            Sub() DoTree2(myTree.Left, myAct),
            Sub() DoTree2(myTree.Right, myAct),
            Sub() myAct(myTree.Data)
        )
    End Sub
End Class

Les deux méthodes indiquées sont équivalentes d’un point de vue fonctionnel. Si vous utilisez la méthode StartNew pour créer et exécuter les tâches, vous obtenez un handle à partir des tâches, qui peut être utilisé pour attendre les tâches et gérer les exceptions.

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