By the way, I hesitate to add a new mandatory key to time.get_clock_info() which indicates if the clock includes time elapsed during a sleep. Is "is_realtime" a good name for such flag? Examples:
time.get_clock_info('time')['is_realtime'] == True time.get_clock_info('monotonic')['is_realtime'] == True time.get_clock_info('process_time')['is_realtime'] == False time.get_clock_info('clock')['is_realtime'] == True on Windows, False on Unix time.get_clock_info('perf_counter')['is_realtime'] == True on Windows and GNU/Hurd (which will use gettimeofday()), False on Unix. It may vary depending on which clocks are available. Another candidate for a new optional key is a flag indicating if the clock includes time elapsed during system suspend. I don't know how to call such key. Let's call it "include_suspend". Examples: time.get_clock_info('time')['include_suspend'] == True time.get_clock_info('monotonic')['include_suspend'] == True on Windows, False on Mac OS X, Linux and FreeBSD time.get_clock_info('perf_counter')['include_suspend'] == False on Mac OS X, Linux and FreeBSD. It is not set on Windows, until someone tells me how QueryPerformanceCounter() behaves on suspend :-) time.get_clock_info('process_time')['include_suspend'] == ??? (not set?) time.get_clock_info('clock')['include_suspend'] == ??? (not set?) Victor 2012/4/12 R. David Murray <rdmur...@bitdance.com>: > On Thu, 12 Apr 2012 13:49:43 -0000, > =?utf-8?B?S3Jpc3Rqw6FuIFZhbHVyIErDs25zc29u?= <krist...@ccpgames.com> wrote: >> Wallclock: This definition is wrong no metter how the BDFL feels about the >> word. Please see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wall_clock_time. > > I agree with the BDFL. I have always heard "wallclock" as referring to > the clock on the wall (that's what the words mean, after all). > > When this term became current that meant an *analog* clock that did not > automatically update for daylight savings time, so naturally if you > measure an interval using it it is equivalent to "real time". > > However, to my mind the implication of the term has always been that > the actual time value returned by a 'wallclock' function can be directly > mapped to the time shown on the clock on the wall (assuming the computer's > clock and the clock on the wall are synchronized, of course). > > Heh. Come to think of it, when I first encountered the term it was in > the context of one of the early IBM PCs running DOS, which means that > the computer clock *was* set to the same time as the wall clock. > > Thus regardless of what Wikipedia thinks, I think in many people's > minds there is an inherent ambiguity in what the term means. If you > use it to measure an interval, then I think most people would agree > automatically that it is equivalent to "real time". But outside of > interval measurement, there is ambiguity. > > So I think the definition in the PEP is correct. > > --David _______________________________________________ Python-Dev mailing list Python-Dev@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-dev Unsubscribe: http://mail.python.org/mailman/options/python-dev/archive%40mail-archive.com