WWW-www.enlightenment.org pushed a commit to branch master.

http://git.enlightenment.org/website/www-content.git/commit/?id=5abe4fb56ec13826e60f412fbe8de734ce3f1755

commit 5abe4fb56ec13826e60f412fbe8de734ce3f1755
Author: Andrew Williams <[email protected]>
Date:   Fri Oct 20 11:09:51 2017 -0700

    Wiki page timer changed with summary [Move Javascript docs to legacy API] 
by Andrew Williams
---
 pages/api/javascript/ecore/timer.txt | 112 +----------------------------------
 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 111 deletions(-)

diff --git a/pages/api/javascript/ecore/timer.txt 
b/pages/api/javascript/ecore/timer.txt
index c1065259..c289145f 100644
--- a/pages/api/javascript/ecore/timer.txt
+++ b/pages/api/javascript/ecore/timer.txt
@@ -1,111 +1 @@
-===== Javascript binding API - Ecore Timer =====
-
-[[api:javascript:ecore|Back to the JS Ecore page]]
-
-**DRAFT**
-
-The Timer module provides flexible timer functionality.
-
-==== Functions ====
-
-=== add(time, callback) ===
-
-Syntax
-
-<code javascript>
-function mycallback() { ... };
-var timerObj = efl.Ecore.Timer.add(time, mycallback);
-</code>
-
-Parameters
-
-   * time - A number with the time, in seconds, with the interval between 
consecutive activation of the timer.
-   * callback - A function taking no arguments to be called when the timer is 
triggered. It must return either ''efl.Ecore.Mainloop.RENEW'' (or 1) or 
''efl.Ecore.Mainloop.Cancel'' (or 0). If it returns the former, it will be 
called again on the next tick (according to ''time''). If it returns the 
latter, it will be deleted automatically, making any references to the timer 
invalid.
-
-Return value
-
-   * object - An object wrapping the newly created timer.
-   * null - If it was not possible to add the timer.
-
-Adds a new timer that will call ''callback'' after ''time'' seconds.
-
-=== addLoop(time, callback) ===
-
-Syntax
-
-<code javascript>
-function mycallback() { ... };
-var timerObj = efl.Ecore.Timer.addLoop(time, mycallback);
-</code>
-
-Parameters
-
-   * time - A number with the time, in seconds, with the interval between 
consecutive activation of the timer.
-   * callback - A function taking no arguments to be called when the timer is 
triggered. It must return either ''efl.Ecore.Mainloop.RENEW'' (or 1) or 
''efl.Ecore.Mainloop.Cancel'' (or 0). If it returns the former, it will be 
called again on the next tick (according to ''time''). If it returns the 
latter, it will be deleted automatically, making any references to the timer 
invalid.
-
-Return value
-
-   * object - An object wrapping the newly created timer.
-   * null - If it was not possible to add the timer.
-
-Works like ''efl.Ecore.Timer.add'', but the reference "now" time is the time 
that the main loop ceased waiting for timeouts and/or events to come in or for 
signals or any other interrupt source. Use this UNLESS you absolutely must get 
the current actual timepoint.
-
-=== timerObj.del() ===
-
-Syntax
-
-<code javascript>
-timerObj.del();
-</code>
-
-Deletes the callee timer object from the list of active timers.
-
-=== dump() ===
-
-Syntax
-
-<code javascript>
-var log = efl.Ecore.Timer.dump();
-</code>
-
-Return value
-
-   * string - The human-readable log.
-
-This function returns a human-readable text-based log for Ecore Timer events.
-
-=== getPrecision() ===
-
-Syntax
-
-<code javascript>
-var precision = efl.Ecore.Timer.getPrecision();
-</code>
-
-Return value
-
-   * number - The current precision for all timers.
-
-Retrieves the current precision used by timer infrastructure.
-
-=== setPrecision(precision) ===
-
-Syntax
-
-<code javascript>
-    efl.Ecore.Timer.setPrecision(precision);
-</code>
-
-Parameters
-
-   * precision - A number with the allowed introduced timeout delay, in 
seconds.
-
-This sets the precision for **all** timers. The precision determines how much 
of a difference from the requested interval is acceptable. One common reason to 
use this function is to **increase** the allowed timeout and thus, **decrease** 
the precision of the timers, this is because less precise the timers result in 
the system waking up less often and thus consuming fewer resources.
-
-Be aware that kernel may delay delivery even further, these delays are always 
possible due other tasks having higher priorities or other scheduler policies.
-
-Example: We have 2 timers, one that expires in a 2.0s and another that expires 
in 2.1s, if precision is 0.1s, then the Ecore will request for the next expire 
to happen in 2.1s and not 2.0s and another one of 0.1 as it would before.
-
-<note important>
-Ecore is smart enough to see if there are timers in the precision range, if it 
does not, in our example if no second timer in (T + precision) existed, then it 
would use the minimum timeout.
-</note>
\ No newline at end of file
+This page is redirected to [[:develop:legacy:api:javascript:ecore:timer]].
\ No newline at end of file

-- 


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