Calculate time for count

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m
m el 28 de En. de 2016
Comentada: Guillaume el 28 de En. de 2016
i have a sequence of iteration i.e
seconds=5;
for i=0:seconds/100:seconds
% run task
end
how can i match 5 equal to 5 seconds? i do know 5 here is not exactly 5 seconds. is it depends on the processor speed? different computer, different time count?
so, next time if i want the calculation to be faster i just change 5 into 2 or 1.
thank you.

Respuestas (2)

Guillaume
Guillaume el 28 de En. de 2016
Editada: Guillaume el 28 de En. de 2016
While theoretically, you could pace your loop to run at whichever speed you want by using tic, toc and pause, this wouldn't be very efficient and prone to drifting.
A better way of running a task at regular interval is to use a timer:
task = @(~,~) disp('event');
t = timer('Period', 5, 'ExecutionMode', 'fixedRate', 'TaskToExecute', 100, 'TimerFcn', task)
t.Run;
Your task must of course take less time to execute than the period of the timer. If not, you can set the 'BusyMode' property of the timer to decide what happens.
  2 comentarios
m
m el 28 de En. de 2016
Editada: Jan el 28 de En. de 2016
is there any easy way?
i've tried now
i.e
t1=now;
t2=now;
elapsed_days1 = t2 - t1;
elasped_second1 = elapsed_days1 *24*60*60;
% elapsed_seconds1
but, it only return total time the task is running not the time i control.
[EDITED, Jan, Code formatted]
Guillaume
Guillaume el 28 de En. de 2016
It's only three lines of code to use a timer, you don't get any easier! timer is the easy way and more importantly is the reliable way. And it's designed for the purpose of running tasks at regular intervals.
As I said you can also regulate the pace of a loop with tic, toc, pause or some java thread sleep (see Jan's answer). I don't find that any easier, and I can guarantee you that after a while your period will have drifted slightly. It's also harder to monitor for task overrun.

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Jan
Jan el 28 de En. de 2016
Editada: Jan el 28 de En. de 2016
Guillaume's suggestion is the most accurate and direct solution: Use a timer if you need a time event.
Another approach:
delay = 5; % In seconds
for k = 1:100
tic
% You computations here
disp(datestr(now, 0));
pause(delay - toc);
end
Note: This is more accurate than pause:
java.lang.Thread.sleep(delay * 1000);

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