std::chrono::time_point
From cppreference.com
Defined in header <chrono> | ||
template< class Clock, | (since C++11) | |
Class template std::chrono::time_point
represents a point in time. It is implemented as if it stores a value of type Duration
indicating the time interval from the start of the Clock
's epoch.
| (until C++23) |
Contents |
[edit]Member types
Type | Description |
Clock clock | the clock on which this time point is measured (typedef) |
Duration duration | a std::chrono::duration type used to measure the time since epoch (typedef) |
duration::rep rep | an arithmetic type representing the number of ticks of the duration (typedef) |
duration::period period | a std::ratio type representing the tick period of the duration (typedef) |
[edit]Member functions
constructs a new time point (public member function) | |
returns the time point as duration since the start of its clock (public member function) | |
modifies the time point by the given duration (public member function) | |
increments or decrements the duration (public member function) | |
[static] | returns the time point corresponding to the smallest duration (public static member function) |
[static] | returns the time point corresponding to the largest duration (public static member function) |
[edit]Non-member functions
(C++11) | performs add and subtract operations involving a time point (function template) |
(C++11)(C++11)(removed in C++20)(C++11)(C++11)(C++11)(C++11)(C++20) | compares two time points (function template) |
(C++11) | converts a time point to another time point on the same clock, with a different duration (function template) |
converts a time_point to another, rounding down (function template) | |
converts a time_point to another, rounding up (function template) | |
converts a time_point to another, rounding to nearest, ties to even (function template) |
[edit]Helper classes
specializes the std::common_type trait (class template specialization) | |
hash support for std::chrono::time_point (class template specialization) |
[edit]Example
Run this code
#include <algorithm>#include <chrono>#include <ctime>#include <iomanip>#include <iostream> void slow_motion(){staticint a[]{1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12};// Generate Γ(13) == 12! permutations:while(std::ranges::next_permutation(a).found){}} int main(){usingnamespace std::literals;// enables literal suffixes, e.g. 24h, 1ms, 1s. const std::chrono::time_point<std::chrono::system_clock> now =std::chrono::system_clock::now(); conststd::time_t t_c =std::chrono::system_clock::to_time_t(now - 24h);std::cout<<"24 hours ago, the time was "<<std::put_time(std::localtime(&t_c), "%F %T.\n")<<std::flush; const std::chrono::time_point<std::chrono::steady_clock> start =std::chrono::steady_clock::now(); std::cout<<"Different clocks are not comparable: \n"" System time: "<< now.time_since_epoch()<<"\n"" Steady time: "<< start.time_since_epoch()<<'\n'; slow_motion(); constauto end =std::chrono::steady_clock::now();std::cout<<"Slow calculations took "<<std::chrono::duration_cast<std::chrono::microseconds>(end - start)<<" ≈ "<<(end - start)/ 1ms <<"ms ≈ "// almost equivalent form of the above, but<<(end - start)/ 1s <<"s.\n";// using milliseconds and seconds accordingly}
Possible output:
24 hours ago, the time was 2021-02-15 18:28:52. Different clocks are not comparable: System time: 1666497022681282572ns Steady time: 413668317434475ns Slow calculations took 2090448µs ≈ 2090ms ≈ 2s.
[edit]See also
(C++11) | a time interval (class template) |
(C++20) | represents a specific year, month, and day (class) |