ArrayList.Synchronized Method
Returns a list wrapper that is synchronized (thread safe).
The following code example shows how to lock the collection using the SyncRoot during the entire enumeration.
ArrayList myCollection = new ArrayList();
lock(myCollection.SyncRoot)
{
foreach (object item in myCollection)
{
// Insert your code here.
}
}
This method is an O(1)
operation.
The following code example shows how to synchronize an ArrayList, determine if an ArrayList is synchronized and use a synchronized ArrayList.
using System;
using System.Collections;
public class SamplesArrayList {
public static void Main() {
// Creates and initializes a new ArrayList.
ArrayList myAL = new ArrayList();
myAL.Add( "The" );
myAL.Add( "quick" );
myAL.Add( "brown" );
myAL.Add( "fox" );
// Creates a synchronized wrapper around the ArrayList.
ArrayList mySyncdAL = ArrayList.Synchronized( myAL );
// Displays the sychronization status of both ArrayLists.
Console.WriteLine( "myAL is {0}.", myAL.IsSynchronized ? "synchronized" : "not synchronized" );
Console.WriteLine( "mySyncdAL is {0}.", mySyncdAL.IsSynchronized ? "synchronized" : "not synchronized" );
}
}
/*
This code produces the following output.
myAL is not synchronized.
mySyncdAL is synchronized.
*/
Remarks
To guarantee the thread safety of the ArrayList, all operations must be done through this wrapper.
Enumerating through a collection is intrinsically not a thread-safe procedure. Even when a collection is synchronized, other threads can still modify the collection, which causes the enumerator to throw an exception. To guarantee thread safety during enumeration, you can either lock the collection during the entire enumeration or catch the exceptions resulting from changes made by other threads.