Tizen Native API
4.0
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Ecore provides very flexible timer functionality. The basic usage of timers, to call a certain function at a certain interval can be achieved with a single line:
Eina_Bool my_func(void *data) { do_funky_stuff_with_data(data); return ECORE_CALLBACK_RENEW; } ecore_timer_add(interval_in_seconds, my_func, data_given_to_function);
ECORE_CALLBACK_CANCEL
instead.An example that shows the usage of a lot of these:
Functions | |
double | ecore_timer_precision_get (void) |
void | ecore_timer_precision_set (double precision) |
Sets the precision to be used by timer infrastructure. | |
char * | ecore_timer_dump (void) |
Ecore_Timer * | ecore_timer_add (double in, Ecore_Task_Cb func, const void *data) |
Ecore_Timer * | ecore_timer_loop_add (double in, Ecore_Task_Cb func, const void *data) |
void * | ecore_timer_del (Ecore_Timer *timer) |
Typedefs | |
typedef Eo | Ecore_Timer |
typedef Eo Ecore_Timer |
A handle for timers
Ecore_Timer* ecore_timer_add | ( | double | in, |
Ecore_Task_Cb | func, | ||
const void * | data | ||
) |
Creates a timer to call the given function in the given period of time.
in | The interval in seconds. |
func | The given function. If func returns 1 , the timer is rescheduled for the next interval in . |
data | Data to pass to func when it is called. |
NULL
on failure.This function adds a timer and returns its handle on success and NULL
on failure. The function func
will be called every in
seconds. The function will be passed the data
pointer as its parameter.
When the timer func
is called, it must return a value of either 1
(or ECORE_CALLBACK_RENEW
) or 0
(or ECORE_CALLBACK_CANCEL
). If it returns 1
, it will be called again at the next tick, or if it returns 0
it will be deleted automatically making any references/handles for it invalid.
void* ecore_timer_del | ( | Ecore_Timer * | timer | ) |
Deletes the specified timer from the timer list.
timer | The timer to delete. |
NULL
is returned if the function is unsuccessful.Note: timer
must be a valid handle. If the timer function has already returned 0
, the handle is no longer valid (and does not need to be delete).
char* ecore_timer_dump | ( | void | ) |
This function returns a human readable text-based log for Ecore_Timer events.
It only contains an useful implementation if EFL is built in debug build profile, but it's safe to call it for any build profile.
Ecore_Timer* ecore_timer_loop_add | ( | double | in, |
Ecore_Task_Cb | func, | ||
const void * | data | ||
) |
Creates a timer to call the given function in the given period of time.
in | The interval in seconds from current loop time. |
func | The given function. If func returns 1, the timer is rescheduled for the next interval in . |
data | Data to pass to func when it is called. |
NULL
on failure.This is the same as ecore_timer_add(), but "now" is the time from ecore_loop_time_get() not ecore_time_get() as ecore_timer_add() uses. See ecore_timer_add() for more details.
double ecore_timer_precision_get | ( | void | ) |
Retrieves the current precision used by timer infrastructure.
void ecore_timer_precision_set | ( | double | precision | ) |
Sets the precision to be used by timer infrastructure.
precision | Allowed introduced timeout delay, in seconds. |
This sets the precision for all timers. The precision determines how much of an difference from the requested interval is acceptable. One common reason to use this function is to increase the allowed timeout and thus decrease precision of the timers, this is because less precise the timers result in the system waking up less often and thus consuming less 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.