QElapsedTimer¶
The QElapsedTimer
class provides a fast way to calculate elapsed times. More…
New in version 4.7.
Synopsis¶
Functions¶
def
__eq__
(rhs)def
__ne__
(rhs)def
elapsed
()def
hasExpired
(timeout)def
invalidate
()def
isValid
()def
msecsSinceReference
()def
msecsTo
(other)def
nsecsElapsed
()def
restart
()def
secsTo
(other)def
start
()
Static functions¶
def
clockType
()def
isMonotonic
()
Detailed Description¶
The QElapsedTimer
class is usually used to quickly calculate how much time has elapsed between two events. Its API is similar to that of QTime
, so code that was using that can be ported quickly to the new class.
However, unlike QTime
, QElapsedTimer
tries to use monotonic clocks if possible. This means it’s not possible to convert QElapsedTimer
objects to a human-readable time.
The typical use-case for the class is to determine how much time was spent in a slow operation. The simplest example of such a case is for debugging purposes, as in the following example:
timer = QElapsedTimer() timer.start() slowOperation1() print("The slow operation took", timer.elapsed(), "milliseconds")
In this example, the timer is started by a call to start()
and the elapsed time is calculated by the elapsed()
function.
The time elapsed can also be used to recalculate the time available for another operation, after the first one is complete. This is useful when the execution must complete within a certain time period, but several steps are needed. The waitFor
-type functions in QIODevice
and its subclasses are good examples of such need. In that case, the code could be as follows:
def executeSlowOperations(timeout): timer = QElapsedTimer() timer.start() slowOperation1() remainingTime = timeout - timer.elapsed() if (remainingTime > 0) slowOperation2(remainingTime)
Another use-case is to execute a certain operation for a specific timeslice. For this, QElapsedTimer
provides the hasExpired()
convenience function, which can be used to determine if a certain number of milliseconds has already elapsed:
def executeOperationsForTime(ms): timer = QElapsedTimer() timer.start() while (not timer.hasExpired(ms)) slowOperation1()
It is often more convenient to use QDeadlineTimer
in this case, which counts towards a timeout in the future instead of tracking elapsed time.
Reference Clocks¶
QElapsedTimer
will use the platform’s monotonic reference clock in all platforms that support it (see isMonotonic()
). This has the added benefit that QElapsedTimer
is immune to time adjustments, such as the user correcting the time. Also unlike QTime
, QElapsedTimer
is immune to changes in the timezone settings, such as daylight-saving periods.
On the other hand, this means QElapsedTimer
values can only be compared with other values that use the same reference. This is especially true if the time since the reference is extracted from the QElapsedTimer
object ( msecsSinceReference()
) and serialised. These values should never be exchanged across the network or saved to disk, since there’s no telling whether the computer node receiving the data is the same as the one originating it or if it has rebooted since.
It is, however, possible to exchange the value with other processes running on the same machine, provided that they also use the same reference clock. QElapsedTimer
will always use the same clock, so it’s safe to compare with the value coming from another process in the same machine. If comparing to values produced by other APIs, you should check that the clock used is the same as QElapsedTimer
(see clockType()
).
32-bit overflows¶
Some of the clocks used by QElapsedTimer
have a limited range and may overflow after hitting the upper limit (usually 32-bit). QElapsedTimer
deals with this overflow issue and presents a consistent timing. However, when extracting the time since reference from QElapsedTimer
, two different processes in the same machine may have different understanding of how much time has actually elapsed.
The information on which clocks types may overflow and how to remedy that issue is documented along with the clock types.
See also
- class PySide6.QtCore.QElapsedTimer¶
PySide6.QtCore.QElapsedTimer(QElapsedTimer)
- Parameters
QElapsedTimer –
PySide6.QtCore.QElapsedTimer
Constructs an invalid QElapsedTimer
. A timer becomes valid once it has been started.
- PySide6.QtCore.QElapsedTimer.ClockType¶
This enum contains the different clock types that QElapsedTimer
may use.
QElapsedTimer
will always use the same clock type in a particular machine, so this value will not change during the lifetime of a program. It is provided so that QElapsedTimer
can be used with other non-Qt implementations, to guarantee that the same reference clock is being used.
Constant
Description
QElapsedTimer.SystemTime
The human-readable system time. This clock is not monotonic.
QElapsedTimer.MonotonicClock
The system’s monotonic clock, usually found in Unix systems. This clock is monotonic and does not overflow.
QElapsedTimer.TickCounter
The system’s tick counter, used on Windows systems. This clock may overflow.
QElapsedTimer.MachAbsoluteTime
The Mach kernel’s absolute time (macOS and iOS). This clock is monotonic and does not overflow.
QElapsedTimer.PerformanceCounter
The high-resolution performance counter provided by Windows. This clock is monotonic and does not overflow.
SystemTime¶
The system time clock is purely the real time, expressed in milliseconds since Jan 1, 1970 at 0:00 UTC. It’s equivalent to the value returned by the C and POSIX time
function, with the milliseconds added. This clock type is currently only used on Unix systems that do not support monotonic clocks (see below).
This is the only non-monotonic clock that QElapsedTimer
may use.
MonotonicClock¶
This is the system’s monotonic clock, expressed in milliseconds since an arbitrary point in the past. This clock type is used on Unix systems which support POSIX monotonic clocks (_POSIX_MONOTONIC_CLOCK
).
This clock does not overflow.
TickCounter¶
The tick counter clock type is based on the system’s or the processor’s tick counter, multiplied by the duration of a tick. This clock type is used on Windows platforms. If the high-precision performance counter is available on Windows, the `` PerformanceCounter
`` clock type is used instead.
The TickCounter
clock type is the only clock type that may overflow. Windows Vista and Windows Server 2008 support the extended 64-bit tick counter, which allows avoiding the overflow.
On Windows systems, the clock overflows after 2^32 milliseconds, which corresponds to roughly 49.7 days. This means two processes’ reckoning of the time since the reference may be different by multiples of 2^32 milliseconds. When comparing such values, it’s recommended that the high 32 bits of the millisecond count be masked off.
MachAbsoluteTime¶
This clock type is based on the absolute time presented by Mach kernels, such as that found on macOS. This clock type is presented separately from MonotonicClock
since macOS and iOS are also Unix systems and may support a POSIX monotonic clock with values differing from the Mach absolute time.
This clock is monotonic and does not overflow.
PerformanceCounter¶
This clock uses the Windows functions QueryPerformanceCounter
and QueryPerformanceFrequency
to access the system’s high-precision performance counter. Since this counter may not be available on all systems, QElapsedTimer
will fall back to the `` TickCounter
`` clock automatically, if this clock cannot be used.
This clock is monotonic and does not overflow.
See also
New in version 4.7.
Returns the clock type that this QElapsedTimer
implementation uses.
See also
- PySide6.QtCore.QElapsedTimer.elapsed()¶
- Return type
int
Returns the number of milliseconds since this QElapsedTimer
was last started.
Calling this function on a QElapsedTimer
that is invalid results in undefined behavior.
See also
- PySide6.QtCore.QElapsedTimer.hasExpired(timeout)¶
- Parameters
timeout – int
- Return type
bool
Returns true
if this QElapsedTimer
has already expired by timeout
milliseconds (that is, more than timeout
milliseconds have elapsed). The value of timeout
can be -1 to indicate that this timer does not expire, in which case this function will always return false.
See also
- PySide6.QtCore.QElapsedTimer.invalidate()¶
Marks this QElapsedTimer
object as invalid.
An invalid object can be checked with isValid()
. Calculations of timer elapsed since invalid data are undefined and will likely produce bizarre results.
- static PySide6.QtCore.QElapsedTimer.isMonotonic()¶
- Return type
bool
Returns true
if this is a monotonic clock, false otherwise. See the information on the different clock types to understand which ones are monotonic.
See also
clockType()
ClockType
- PySide6.QtCore.QElapsedTimer.isValid()¶
- Return type
bool
Returns false
if the timer has never been started or invalidated by a call to invalidate()
.
See also
- PySide6.QtCore.QElapsedTimer.msecsSinceReference()¶
- Return type
int
Returns the number of milliseconds between last time this QElapsedTimer
object was started and its reference clock’s start.
This number is usually arbitrary for all clocks except the SystemTime
clock. For that clock type, this number is the number of milliseconds since January 1st, 1970 at 0:00 UTC (that is, it is the Unix time expressed in milliseconds).
On Linux, Windows and Apple platforms, this value is usually the time since the system boot, though it usually does not include the time the system has spent in sleep states.
See also
- PySide6.QtCore.QElapsedTimer.msecsTo(other)¶
- Parameters
other –
PySide6.QtCore.QElapsedTimer
- Return type
int
Returns the number of milliseconds between this QElapsedTimer
and other
. If other
was started before this object, the returned value will be negative. If it was started later, the returned value will be positive.
The return value is undefined if this object or other
were invalidated.
- PySide6.QtCore.QElapsedTimer.nsecsElapsed()¶
- Return type
int
Returns the number of nanoseconds since this QElapsedTimer
was last started.
Calling this function on a QElapsedTimer
that is invalid results in undefined behavior.
On platforms that do not provide nanosecond resolution, the value returned will be the best estimate available.
See also
- PySide6.QtCore.QElapsedTimer.__ne__(rhs)¶
- Parameters
- Return type
bool
- PySide6.QtCore.QElapsedTimer.__eq__(rhs)¶
- Parameters
- Return type
bool
- PySide6.QtCore.QElapsedTimer.restart()¶
- Return type
int
Restarts the timer and returns the number of milliseconds elapsed since the previous start. This function is equivalent to obtaining the elapsed time with elapsed()
and then starting the timer again with start()
, but it does so in one single operation, avoiding the need to obtain the clock value twice.
Calling this function on a QElapsedTimer
that is invalid results in undefined behavior.
The following example illustrates how to use this function to calibrate a parameter to a slow operation (for example, an iteration count) so that this operation takes at least 250 milliseconds:
timer = QElapsedTimer() count = 1 timer.start() do { = 2 slowOperation2(count) } while (timer.restart() < 250) return countSee also
- PySide6.QtCore.QElapsedTimer.secsTo(other)¶
- Parameters
other –
PySide6.QtCore.QElapsedTimer
- Return type
int
Returns the number of seconds between this QElapsedTimer
and other
. If other
was started before this object, the returned value will be negative. If it was started later, the returned value will be positive.
Calling this function on or with a QElapsedTimer
that is invalid results in undefined behavior.
- PySide6.QtCore.QElapsedTimer.start()¶
Starts this timer. Once started, a timer value can be checked with elapsed()
or msecsSinceReference()
.
Normally, a timer is started just before a lengthy operation, such as:
timer = QElapsedTimer() timer.start() slowOperation1() print("The slow operation took", timer.elapsed(), "milliseconds")
Also, starting a timer makes it valid again.
See also
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