I have seen other user posts which show Stopwatch measuring time spent in "Thread.Sleep(5000)" to be around 5000ms.
But my program produces the following results
for (int i = 0; i < 20; ++i)
{
Stopwatch sw = Stopwatch.StartNew();
DateTime start = DateTime.Now;
Thread.Sleep(5000);
sw.Stop();
Console.Out.WriteLine(
"StopWatch Diff:" +
sw.ElapsedMilliseconds.ToString());
Console.Out.WriteLine(
"DateTime Diff:" +
DateTime.Now.Subtract(start).TotalMilliseconds.ToString());
}
StopWatch Diff:1684 DateTime Diff:5262.592 StopWatch Diff:1625 DateTime Diff:4997.12 StopWatch Diff:1604 DateTime Diff:4997.12 StopWatch Diff:1601 DateTime Diff:4997.12 StopWatch Diff:1690 DateTime Diff:4997.12 StopWatch Diff:1603
Is it just me who is observing this behaviour? Why stopwatch measures 1.6 seconds when 5 seconds have actually passed. It is the time that the thread is actually running?
C programming language is a machine-independent programming language that is mainly used to create many types of applications and operating systems such as Windows, and other complicated programs such as the Oracle database, Git, Python interpreter, and games and is considered a programming foundation in the process of ...
In the real sense it has no meaning or full form. It was developed by Dennis Ritchie and Ken Thompson at AT&T bell Lab. First, they used to call it as B language then later they made some improvement into it and renamed it as C and its superscript as C++ which was invented by Dr.
Quote from wikipedia: "A successor to the programming language B, C was originally developed at Bell Labs by Dennis Ritchie between 1972 and 1973 to construct utilities running on Unix." The creators want that everyone "see" his language. So he named it "C".
C is a structured, procedural programming language that has been widely used both for operating systems and applications and that has had a wide following in the academic community. Many versions of UNIX-based operating systems are written in C.
The Stopwatch class is not reliable.
This is unreliable on processors that do not have a constant clock speed (most processors can reduce the clock speed to conserve energy). This is explained in detail here.
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