std::chrono::duration
From cppreference.com
Defined in header
<chrono>
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template<
class Rep, |
(since C++11) | |
Class template std::chrono::duration
represents a time interval.
It consists of a count of ticks of type Rep
and a tick period, where the tick period is a compile-time rational constant representing the number of seconds from one tick to the next.
The only data stored in a duration
is a tick count of type Rep
. If Rep
is floating point, then the duration
can represent fractions of ticks. Period
is included as part of the duration's type, and is only used when converting between different durations.
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[edit] Member types
Member type | Definition |
rep
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Rep , an arithmetic type representing the number of ticks
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period
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Period , a std::ratio representing the tick period (i.e. the number of seconds per tick)
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[edit] Member functions
constructs new duration (public member function) |
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assigns the contents (public member function) |
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returns the count of ticks (public member function) |
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[static]
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returns the special duration value zero (public static member function) |
[static]
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returns the special duration value min (public static member function) |
[static]
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returns the special duration value max (public static member function) |
implements unary + and unary - (public member function) |
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increments or decrements the tick count (public member function) |
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implements compound assignment between two durations (public member function) |
[edit] Non-member functions
specializes the std::common_type trait (class template specialization) |
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implements arithmetic operations with durations as arguments (function template) |
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compares two durations (function template) |
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converts a duration to another, with a different tick interval (function template) |
[edit] Helper types
Type | Definition |
std::chrono::nanoseconds | duration</*signed integer type of at least 64 bits*/, std::nano> |
std::chrono::microseconds | duration</*signed integer type of at least 55 bits*/, std::micro> |
std::chrono::milliseconds | duration</*signed integer type of at least 45 bits*/, std::milli> |
std::chrono::seconds | duration</*signed integer type of at least 35 bits*/> |
std::chrono::minutes | duration</*signed integer type of at least 29 bits*/, std::ratio<60>> |
std::chrono::hours | duration</*signed integer type of at least 23 bits*/, std::ratio<3600>> |
Note: each of the predefined duration types covers a range of at least ±292 years.
[edit] Helper classes
indicates that a duration is convertible to duration with different tick period (class template) |
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constructs zero, min, and max values of a tick count of given type (class template) |
[edit] Literals
Defined in inline namespace
std::literals::chrono_literals |
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(C++14)
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A std::chrono::duration literal representing hours (function) |
(C++14)
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A std::chrono::duration literal representing minutes (function) |
(C++14)
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A std::chrono::duration literal representing seconds (function) |
(C++14)
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A std::chrono::duration literal representing milliseconds (function) |
(C++14)
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A std::chrono::duration literal representing microseconds (function) |
(C++14)
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A std::chrono::duration literal representing nanoseconds (function) |
[edit] Example
This example shows how to define several custom duration types and convert between types:
Run this code
#include <iostream> #include <chrono> int main() { using shakes = std::chrono::duration<int, std::ratio<1, 100000000>>; using jiffies = std::chrono::duration<int, std::centi>; using microfortnights = std::chrono::duration<float, std::ratio<12096,10000>>; using nanocenturies = std::chrono::duration<float, std::ratio<3155,1000>>; std::chrono::seconds sec(1); std::cout << "1 second is:\n"; std::cout << std::chrono::duration_cast<shakes>(sec).count() << " shakes\n"; std::cout << std::chrono::duration_cast<jiffies>(sec).count() << " jiffies\n"; std::cout << microfortnights(sec).count() << " microfortnights\n"; std::cout << nanocenturies(sec).count() << " nanocenturies\n"; }
Output:
1 second is: 100000000 shakes 100 jiffies 0.82672 microfortnights 0.316957 nanocenturies