I have a project where I'm trying to populate some data in a constructor:
public class ViewModel
{
public ObservableCollection<TData> Data { get; set; }
async public ViewModel()
{
Data = await GetDataTask();
}
public Task<ObservableCollection<TData>> GetDataTask()
{
Task<ObservableCollection<TData>> task;
//Create a task which represents getting the data
return task;
}
}
Unfortunately, I'm getting an error:
The modifier async
is not valid for this item
Of course, if I wrap in a standard method and call that from the constructor:
public async void Foo()
{
Data = await GetDataTask();
}
it works fine. Likewise, if I use the old inside-out way
GetData().ContinueWith(t => Data = t.Result);
That works too. I was just wondering why we can't call await
from within a constructor directly. There are probably lots of (even obvious) edge cases and reasons against it, I just can't think of any. I've also search around for an explanation, but can't seem to find any.
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