durations v3.4.2
durations
Compatibilty
Both Node.js and browsers are supported by durations. When using Node.js, the nanosecond-granulatiry process.hrtime() function is used. The best substitution is selected when in the browser such that consistency is maintained even if time granularity cannot be.
Installation
npm install --save durationsMethods
The following functions are exported:
duration(nanoseconds)- constructs a new Durationnanos(nanoseconds)- constructs a new Durationmicros(microseconds)- constructs a new Durationmillis(milliseconds)- constructs a new Durationseconds(seconds)- constructs a new Durationstopwatch()- constructs a new Stopwatch (stopped)time(function)- times a function synchronouslytimeAsync(function(callback))- times a function asynchronouslytimePromised(function())- times a promise-returning function
Duration
Represents a duration with nanosecond granularity, and provides methods for converting to other granularities, and formatting the duration.
Methods
format()- human readable string representing the durationnanos()- duration as nanosecondsmicros()- duration as microsecondsmillis()- duration as millisecondsseconds()- duration as secondsminutes()- duration as minuteshours()- duration as hoursdays()- duration as days
const {duration} = require('durations')
const nanoseconds = 987654321
console.log("Duration is", duration(nanoseconds).format())
// Or, since toString() is an alias to format()
console.log(`Duration is ${duration(nanoseconds)}`)Stopwatch
A nanosecond granularity (on Node.js) stopwatch with chainable control methods, and built-in formatting.
Stopwatch Methods
start()- start and return the stopwatch (no-op if already running)stop()- stop and return the stopwatch (no-op if not running)reset()- reset to zero elapsed time and return the stopwatch (implies stop)duration()- fetch the elapsed time as a DurationisRunning()- is the stopwatch running (true/false)
const {stopwatch} = require('durations')
const watch = stopwatch()
// Pauses the stopwatch. Returns the stopwatch.
watch.stop()
// Starts the stopwatch from where it was last stopped. Returns the stopwatch.
watch.start()
// Reset the stopwatch (duration is set back to zero). Returns the stopwatch.
watch.reset()
console.log(`${watch.duration().seconds()} seconds have elapsed`)
// OR
console.log(`${watch} have elapsed`)Timer
Times the execution of a function, and returns the duration.
const {time: timeSync, timeAsync} = require('durations')
// Synchronous work
const someFunction = () => {
let count = 0
while (count < 1000000) {
count++
}
console.log(`Count is: ${count}`)
}
console.log(`Took ${timeSync(someFunction)} to do something`)
// Asynchronous work
const someOtherFunction = next => {
someFunction()
next()
}
timeAsync(someOtherFunction, duration => {
console.log(`Took ${duration} to do something else.`)
})
// Promised work
const somePromisedOp = () => {
return new Promise((resolve) => {
someFunction()
resolve()
})
}
timePromised(somePromisedOp)
.then(duration => {
console.log(`Took ${duration} to keep promise.`)
})6 years ago
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