On Fri, 2018-07-20 at 12:52 -0400, Andrew Stitcher wrote:
> I've now looked at the actual code!
>
> Things are a bit more complicated than I remembered:
I forgot one semi-important difference between setupNextFireTime() and
restart().
setupNextFireTime() is intended to be used for periodic tasks
I've now looked at the actual code!
Things are a bit more complicated than I remembered:
TimerTasks can have two different types of time to trigger them, a
target absolute time ("at 3pm on 3 Jan 2016 UTC") and a relative time
("in 300ms"). You can only create one or the other of these TimerTask
(
On Fri, 2018-07-20 at 11:27 -0400, Kim van der Riet wrote:
> ...
> I am using the timer in periodic mode, ie with period set to an
> interval
Thanks for describing what you are trying to do: As I mentioned earlier
your case best matches the one-shot mode not the periodic mode.
> ...
> The idea i
On 07/20/2018 11:04 AM, Gordon Sim wrote:
On 20/07/18 15:50, Andrew Stitcher wrote:
On Fri, 2018-07-20 at 10:47 -0400, Andrew Stitcher wrote:
On Fri, 2018-07-20 at 15:44 +0100, Gordon Sim wrote:
...
I believe Kim is using restart() but is debugging some issue where
the
task is postponed aft
On 20/07/18 15:50, Andrew Stitcher wrote:
On Fri, 2018-07-20 at 10:47 -0400, Andrew Stitcher wrote:
On Fri, 2018-07-20 at 15:44 +0100, Gordon Sim wrote:
...
I believe Kim is using restart() but is debugging some issue where
the
task is postponed after it has already fired, which he does not
wan
On Fri, 2018-07-20 at 10:47 -0400, Andrew Stitcher wrote:
> On Fri, 2018-07-20 at 15:44 +0100, Gordon Sim wrote:
> > ...
> > I believe Kim is using restart() but is debugging some issue where
> > the
> > task is postponed after it has already fired, which he does not
> > want
> > (not sure why no
On Fri, 2018-07-20 at 15:44 +0100, Gordon Sim wrote:
> ...
> I believe Kim is using restart() but is debugging some issue where
> the
> task is postponed after it has already fired, which he does not want
> (not sure why not). Is that right Kim?
In that case I think you need to create a new Time
On 20/07/18 15:42, Andrew Stitcher wrote:
I think I can help shed some light on the original intention of these
two methods:
Essentially they are intended for different purposes: (As Gordon says)
setUpNextFire() is intended only for use with periodic timers and is
intended to be used to set up t
I think I can help shed some light on the original intention of these
two methods:
Essentially they are intended for different purposes: (As Gordon says)
setUpNextFire() is intended only for use with periodic timers and is
intended to be used to set up the next firing *after the time has just
fire
On 07/20/2018 10:28 AM, Gordon Sim wrote:
I thought what you wanted was a third option - a delay() - which would
postpone the task to the full timeout again, but only if it had not
already run. If so, that seems reasonable to me and should be easy to
add. I think adding is safer than modifying
On 20/07/18 15:18, Kim van der Riet wrote:
On 07/20/2018 10:00 AM, Gordon Sim wrote:
On 20/07/18 14:50, Kim van der Riet wrote:
I agree that this is ambiguous. However, if the intent is to allow
the timer to have period added for any state, why do we need
setUpNextFire()? This idea seems log
On 07/20/2018 10:00 AM, Gordon Sim wrote:
On 20/07/18 14:50, Kim van der Riet wrote:
I agree that this is ambiguous. However, if the intent is to allow the
timer to have period added for any state, why do we need
setUpNextFire()? This idea seems logically wrong.
I believe setUpNextFire() w
On 20/07/18 14:50, Kim van der Riet wrote:
I agree that this is ambiguous. However, if the intent is to allow the
timer to have period added for any state, why do we need
setUpNextFire()? This idea seems logically wrong.
I believe setUpNextFire() was intended to be used by the Task subclass
i
I agree that this is ambiguous. However, if the intent is to allow the
timer to have period added for any state, why do we need
setUpNextFire()? This idea seems logically wrong.
On 07/19/2018 03:32 PM, Gordon Sim wrote:
The doxygen comment for the method states:
This can be called either
On 19/07/18 20:28, Gordon Sim wrote:
On 19/07/18 16:11, Kim van der Riet wrote:
The TimerTask class has two methods which change and/or set the time
when the timer will fire. Both methods assume a timer period has been
set when the task was originally created.
setUpNextFire() is called *after
On 19/07/18 16:11, Kim van der Riet wrote:
The TimerTask class has two methods which change and/or set the time
when the timer will fire. Both methods assume a timer period has been
set when the task was originally created.
setUpNextFire() is called *after* the timer has already fired, and
al
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