Cameron Simpson wrote: > On 04Apr2012 22:23, PJ Eby <pje at telecommunity.com> wrote: > | On Apr 4, 2012 7:28 PM, "Victor Stinner" <victor.stinner at gmail.com> wrote: > | > More details why it's hard to define such function and why I dropped > | > it from the PEP. > | > > | > If someone wants to propose again such function ("monotonic or > | > fallback to system" clock), two issues should be solved: > | > > | > - name of the function > | > - description of the function > | > | Maybe I missed it, but did anyone ever give a reason why the fallback > | couldn't be to Steven D'Aprano's monotonic wrapper algorithm over the > | system clock? (Given a suitable minimum delta.) That function appeared to > | me to provide a sufficiently monotonic clock for timeout purposes, if > | nothing else. > > It was pointed out (by Nick Coglan I think?) that if the system clock > stepped backwards then a timeout would be extended by at least that > long. For example, code that waited (by polling the synthetic clock) > for 1s could easily wait an hour if the system clock stepped back that > far. Probaby undesirable. Steven D'Aprano's synthetic clock is able to partially avoid that situation -- worst case is a timeout of double what you asked for -- so 10 seconds instead of 5 (which is much better than 3600!). ~Ethan~
RetroSearch is an open source project built by @garambo | Open a GitHub Issue
Search and Browse the WWW like it's 1997 | Search results from DuckDuckGo
HTML:
3.2
| Encoding:
UTF-8
| Version:
0.7.4