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Create Timer Using C++11
Here we will see how to make timer using C++. Here we are creating one class called later. This class has following properties.
- int (milliseconds to wait until to run code)
- bool (If this is true, it returns instantly, and run the code after specified time on another thread)
- The variable arguments (exactly we want to feed to std::bind)
We can change the chrono::milliseconds to nanoseconds or microseconds etc. to change the precision.
Example Code
#include <functional> #include <chrono> #include <future> #include <cstdio> class later { public: template <class callable, class... arguments> later(int after, bool async, callable&& f, arguments&&... args){ std::function<typename std::result_of<callable(arguments...)>::type()> task(std::bind(std::forward<callable>(f), std::forward<arguments>(args)...)); if (async) { std::thread([after, task]() { std::this_thread::sleep_for(std::chrono::milliseconds(after)); task(); }).detach(); } else { std::this_thread::sleep_for(std::chrono::milliseconds(after)); task(); } } }; void test1(void) { return; } void test2(int a) { printf("result of test 2: %d\n", a); return; } int main() { later later_test1(3000, false, &test1); later later_test2(1000, false, &test2, 75); later later_test3(3000, false, &test2, 101); }
Output
$ g++ test.cpp -lpthread $ ./a.out result of test 2: 75 result of test 2: 101 $
first result after 4 seconds. The second result after three seconds from the first one
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