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Is it safe just to set CheckForIllegalCrossThreadCalls to false to avoid cross threading errors during debugging?
1 answer
I have a class that receives data from serialport. i used action<T> delegate
to pass data to the form where it is displayed in a textbox. the thing is i could not access the textbox
control, becouse it says: Cross-thread operation not valid: Control accessed from a thread other than the thread it was created on
.
so i set Control.CheckForIllegalCrossThreadCalls = false
, and it is working.
is it good idea to do that? or there is a better way of doing it.
Thanks
While it may appear to work most of the time, it is sure to fail every now and then.
If you need to access/modify the UI control from another thread, use Control.Invoke.
No it's not. A good idea would have been to put your error into a google search. If you had clicked the first link, you would have found a post here on SO that explained it. This way, you only produced another duplicate.
Not a good idea to do that.
I believe the preferred method is to check to see if Control.InvokeRequired == true, and if so then use Control.Invoke with the proper delegate, which will marshall the method call onto the UI thread.
Will you write something like below
try
{
Object obj=null;
var result = obj.ToString();
}
catch (Exception )
{
}
I am sure your answer would be NO , similar thing is with Control.CheckForIllegalCrossThreadCalls = false, it will just eating exception but present unknown results to your estimated clients