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C#: "Using" Statements with HttpWebRequests/HttpWebResponses

Jon Skeet made a comment (via Twitter) on my SOApiDotNet code (a .NET library for the pre-alpha Stack Overflow API):

@maximz2005 One thing I've noticed just from browsing the source quickly: you don't disposed (sic) of WebResponses. "using" statements FTW.

He indicates that I need to wrap these Web sessions in "using" statements. However, I have a question about this: should I wrap the whole thing, starting with the HttpWebRequest, or should I create the WebRequest outside of the "using" statement and then wrap the Response inside? I have a feeling that the difference is that, in the former, both objects would be disposed of - is this correct?

Thanks in advance.

like image 230
Maxim Zaslavsky Avatar asked Dec 28 '09 08:12

Maxim Zaslavsky


3 Answers

HttpWebRequest itself is not disposable unlike HttpWebResponse. You should wrap disposable resources with using to allow early and determined cleanup. Correctly implemented IDisposable pattern allows multiple calls to Dispose without any issues so even the outer using statement wraps resource that during its own dispose disposes inner using statement resource it is still ok.

Code example

var request = (HttpWebRequest)WebRequest.Create("example.com"); 
using (var response = (HttpWebResponse)request.GetResponse()) 
{ 
    // Code here 
}
like image 95
Dzmitry Huba Avatar answered Oct 11 '22 01:10

Dzmitry Huba


Everything wrapped in a using () {} block (that is, inside of the first brackets) is disposed when you leave the scope.

I haven't used your library so far (seems nice though), but I'd argue that you should explicitly dispose every IDisposable you create (= are responsible for) and don't return to a caller.

A sidenote, since I've seen a lot of people struggling with multiple things to dispose: Instead of

using (var foo = SomeIDisposable) {
  using (var bar = SomeOtherIDisposable) {
  }
}

which needs a lot of vertical space you can write

using (var foo = SomeIDisposable)
using (var bar = SomeOtherIDisposable) {
}
like image 30
Benjamin Podszun Avatar answered Oct 11 '22 01:10

Benjamin Podszun


In order to prevent memory leaks you should call Dispose on every object that implements IDisposable. You can ensure that the Dispose method in called by using the using keyword (no pun intended) as it is just a syntactic sugar for try-finally block.

like image 41
Giorgi Avatar answered Oct 11 '22 01:10

Giorgi