TL; DR; First and foremost, Stack Overflow is a repository of Q&A intended to help future readers. If you can't reproduce the problem with a more generic example or share your actual working code, the question is much less likely to be found useful by others. Not to mention it may be impossible to help you without those details as further explained below. Lack of credential wouldn't invalidate an MCVE alone, but if one if required and you can't provide it, that may be grounds for closing the question.
To cover a few of your statements in more detail:
I don't think it appropriate to include credentials to the site in a public forum
At the risk of sounding obvious, use fake secrets in sample code. An MCVE may require that the code be runnable by others, but it's understandable why a real credential wouldn't be provided. I have never seen a question closed for lack of MCVE when the asker hasn't provided a working secret, because secrets should remain so.
If you ever do accidentally share a secret:
- Edit the actual secret out of your post (temporarily obfuscating it).
- Flag the post for moderator intervention. Explain the situation with a custom mod flag and ask that they remove any post revisions with the secret in it.
- Rotate the secret immediately.
You can also help with items 1 and 2 on others' posts if you have full edit privileges, but if not, you can still flag a moderator for assistance in removing the information.
I also think it inadvisable to provide the precise CSS selectors I'm using while scraping
You can try to give less context in your question as to what you're scraping and why. However, sometimes you really can't share your code due to business policy, contractual obligations, or other reasons. In these cases, your question may be closed as off topic for lacking details if you can't share required information to answer your question.
One tip I have here (I've asked questions AD questions which could potentially expose authentication and authorization structure if not careful), is that often when internal data can't be exposed, you can still generalize the proprietary information with generic text, like Property1
, Property2
, https://domain.tld
, etc. It's more work to do so, but as long as the data structure itself isn't considered proprietary you can almost always remove business information from your code samples so they both satisfy data sharing requirements by your employer and the requests for more information by this community.
async
/await
,HttpClient
) incorrectly.if( retry == 10 )
rethrow? After HTML loading? Answering all those questions (use a debugger or sprinkle print statements - whatever) will help others understand what's happening. I am in serious doubt your question is in any way related to the structure of the resource.Task.Run(async () => { }
? If it "hangs" where does it hang? In other words: When you break into the debugger at which statement is each thread? You do get passedTask.WhenAll
, right?Task.WhenAll
is successfully returning aTask
, but I never see the debugger active statement past that line.Debug.Print
afterTask.WhenAll
doesn't output a string.