jvanegmond Posted March 1, 2009 Share Posted March 1, 2009 athiwatc, that is a bad use of a global variable. Please see the post above you with how you should have done it according to common programming rules. github.com/jvanegmond Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ProgAndy Posted March 1, 2009 Share Posted March 1, 2009 If you want it even more accurate, you should to all assigning outside of the func: Func _HighPrecisionSleep(ByRef $aSleep) DllCall($aSleep[0],"dword","ZwDelayExecution","int",0,"ptr",$aSleep[2]) EndFunc Func _HighPrecisionSleep_Init($iMicroSeconds=0) Local $aSleep[3] = [DllOpen("ntdll.dll"),DllStructCreate("int64 time;")] $aSleep[2] = DllStructGetPtr($aSleep[1]) DllStructSetData($aSleep[1],"time",-1*($iMicroSeconds*10)) Return $aSleep EndFunc Func _HighPrecisionSleep_Set(ByRef $aSleep, $iMicroSeconds) DllStructSetData($aSleep[1],"time",-1*($iMicroSeconds*10)) EndFunc Func _HighPrecisionSleep_UnInit(ByRef $aSleep) DllClose($aSleep[0]) Dim $aSleep[3] = [0,0,0] EndFunc $Sleep = _HighPrecisionSleep_Init(10) _HighPrecisionSleep($Sleep) ; sleep 10 microseconds _HighPrecisionSleep_Set($Sleep,100) _HighPrecisionSleep($Sleep) ; sleep 100 microseconds *GERMAN* [note: you are not allowed to remove author / modified info from my UDFs]My UDFs:[_SetImageBinaryToCtrl] [_TaskDialog] [AutoItObject] [Animated GIF (GDI+)] [ClipPut for Image] [FreeImage] [GDI32 UDFs] [GDIPlus Progressbar] [Hotkey-Selector] [Multiline Inputbox] [MySQL without ODBC] [RichEdit UDFs] [SpeechAPI Example] [WinHTTP]UDFs included in AutoIt: FTP_Ex (as FTPEx), _WinAPI_SetLayeredWindowAttributes Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
colafrysen Posted August 19, 2009 Share Posted August 19, 2009 Just wanted to say thank you for this function, I actually come to use it on my ALIBI Controller app, in which I use the TCP UDF from Kip.because if I send data in a loop which has no sleep, the receiver of the data misses some bits, and with a 1ms sleep its slow as hell...But with this UDF with which I have such great precision I can get the send-loop tight but still not so fast that the receiver misses anything.So to the guys who said thats its useless, think again >_< [font="Impact"]Use the helpfile, It´s one of the best exlusive features of Autoit.[/font]http://support.microsoft.com/kb/q555375ALIBI Run - a replacement for the windows run promptPC Controller - an application for controlling other PCs[size="1"]Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings.[/size][size="1"]http://bit.ly/cAMPZV[/size] Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Info Posted August 19, 2009 Share Posted August 19, 2009 What DexterMorgan said. >_ Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
wraithdu Posted March 25, 2010 Share Posted March 25, 2010 (edited) Seemed easier this way: Func _HPSleep($iSleep, $fMs = 1) ; default is milliseconds, otherwise microseconds (1 ms = 1000 µs) If $fMs Then $iSleep *= 1000 ; convert to ms DllCall("ntdll.dll", "dword", "NtDelayExecution", "int", 0, "int64*", -10 * $iSleep) EndFunc In testing, about 1 ms is as low as AutoIt can measure: Sleep(1000) ; more accurate results For $i = 1 To 10 $timer = TimerInit() _HPSleep(1) ; 1 ms ConsoleWrite(TimerDiff($timer) & @CRLF) Next /edit: Changed Zw -> Nt Edited March 25, 2010 by wraithdu Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Beege Posted March 25, 2010 Share Posted March 25, 2010 I wonder how this function will perform in assembly. Assembly Code: fasmg . fasm . BmpSearch . Au3 Syntax Highlighter . Bounce Multithreading Example . IDispatchASMUDFs: Explorer Frame . ITaskBarList . Scrolling Line Graph . Tray Icon Bar Graph . Explorer Listview . Wiimote . WinSnap . Flicker Free Labels . iTunesPrograms: Ftp Explorer . Snipster . Network Meter . Resistance Calculator Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
monoceres Posted March 25, 2010 Author Share Posted March 25, 2010 I wonder how this function will perform in assembly. What do mean? In the end, zwDelayExecution boils down to machine code instructions, they always execute the same.Code is just code is just code. Broken link? PM me and I'll send you the file! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Beege Posted March 25, 2010 Share Posted March 25, 2010 What do mean? In the end, zwDelayExecution boils down to machine code instructions, they always execute the same.Code is just code is just code.I just meant how accurate the sleep would be. Like you said, it takes autoit some time to call the function so maybe in assembly we could get a better measurement.. Assembly Code: fasmg . fasm . BmpSearch . Au3 Syntax Highlighter . Bounce Multithreading Example . IDispatchASMUDFs: Explorer Frame . ITaskBarList . Scrolling Line Graph . Tray Icon Bar Graph . Explorer Listview . Wiimote . WinSnap . Flicker Free Labels . iTunesPrograms: Ftp Explorer . Snipster . Network Meter . Resistance Calculator Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
trancexx Posted March 25, 2010 Share Posted March 25, 2010 Nt... should be the name of the function. Proper is proper ♡♡♡ . eMyvnE Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
monoceres Posted March 25, 2010 Author Share Posted March 25, 2010 Nt... should be the name of the function. Proper is proper Hey reverser! Tell me the difference! Broken link? PM me and I'll send you the file! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
wraithdu Posted March 25, 2010 Share Posted March 25, 2010 The code has the same address. However technically Nt... is for user mode and Zw... is for kernel mode. I don't know if there is some deep down Windows difference in how the function is actually called. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mage123 Posted October 6, 2010 Share Posted October 6, 2010 If you make it input ms, it actually sleeps for (floor($ms)+1)*1000/1024 ms (unless you put in 0 which I have no idea). Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
wraithdu Posted January 13, 2011 Share Posted January 13, 2011 Interesting, using my function above: ; pretty good $timer = TimerInit() For $i = 1 To 100 _HPSleep(10) ; 10 ms Next ConsoleWrite(TimerDiff($timer) & @CRLF) ; i got 999.876225456811 ; still pretty good $timer = TimerInit() For $i = 1 To 100 _HPSleep(1) ; 1 ms Next ConsoleWrite(TimerDiff($timer) & @CRLF) ; i got 99.9358030598962 ; i think we hit an AutoIt limit at 1ms of sleep $timer = TimerInit() For $i = 1 To 100 _HPSleep(100, 0) ; 100 microsec = 0.1 ms Next ConsoleWrite(TimerDiff($timer) & @CRLF) ; i got 99.962453081157 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
IanN1990 Posted October 21, 2012 Share Posted October 21, 2012 I have two Questions. Amusing the sleep value doesn't change and will get run thousands of time. Which would be the better code to use ? ;Varaibles - Example A $SleepDll=DllOpen("ntdll.dll") $SleepStruct=DllStructCreate("int64 time;") DllStructSetData($SleepStruct,"time",-10000) While 1 DllCall($SleepDll,"dword","ZwDelayExecution","int",0,"ptr",DllStructGetPtr($SleepStruct)) WEnd ;All in One - Example B While DllCall("ntdll.dll", "dword", "NtDelayExecution", "int", 0, "int64*", -10000) WEnd If i understand the function and how autoit works, Example A is the better. It only opens, creates and edits once whereas example b needs to do everything new every loop. Am i correct? Second question. I was looking into sleep(), where i found sleep(1) and sleep(100) is basicly the same. Aside from sleep(100) is just calling the same function 100 times, something to do with a tick. So If i had this function set to 10-15ms "which is the same as sleep(1). Would this be better in terms of performance or effect? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BrewManNH Posted October 21, 2012 Share Posted October 21, 2012 Sleep(1) is equivalent to sleep(10), not sleep(100). The lowest the sleep goes is 10ms, changing it to any other number than 1-10 shouldn't affect any performance situations, and even if it did, it would only affect it in the very low ms range. Also, you're sleeping the script, there's no performance happening at that time in your script anyways, so it's all moot. If I posted any code, assume that code was written using the latest release version unless stated otherwise. Also, if it doesn't work on XP I can't help with that because I don't have access to XP, and I'm not going to.Give a programmer the correct code and he can do his work for a day. Teach a programmer to debug and he can do his work for a lifetime - by Chirag GudeHow to ask questions the smart way! I hereby grant any person the right to use any code I post, that I am the original author of, on the autoitscript.com forums, unless I've specifically stated otherwise in the code or the thread post. If you do use my code all I ask, as a courtesy, is to make note of where you got it from. Back up and restore Windows user files _Array.au3 - Modified array functions that include support for 2D arrays. - ColorChooser - An add-on for SciTE that pops up a color dialog so you can select and paste a color code into a script. - Customizable Splashscreen GUI w/Progress Bar - Create a custom "splash screen" GUI with a progress bar and custom label. - _FileGetProperty - Retrieve the properties of a file - SciTE Toolbar - A toolbar demo for use with the SciTE editor - GUIRegisterMsg demo - Demo script to show how to use the Windows messages to interact with controls and your GUI. - Latin Square password generator Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
IanN1990 Posted October 21, 2012 Share Posted October 21, 2012 (edited) @BrewManAh. I agree sleep(1) is not the same as sleep(100). Infact from what i found sleep(1) - sleep(10) all yield the same 15ms sleep. In terms of the examples i posted from what i could find. Example A yields better performances in lower sleeps but when you start increasing the sleep they tend to become the same. More important for others I guess who are after pin-point timers. Edited October 21, 2012 by IanN1990 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Sven Posted April 1, 2013 Share Posted April 1, 2013 Sorry to bring this up again. Out of curiosity I was looking again at ways for smaller and more precise ways to make my script pause, or rather run as quickly as possible without consuming a CPU core all for itself. Using $hDll = DllOpen("ntdll.dll") $rounds = 500 Sleep(1000) $begin = TimerInit() For $i = 1 To $rounds _HPSleep(3, 1) Next $dif = TimerDiff($begin) MsgBox(0, "test", "total: " & $dif & @crlf & "average: " & $dif / $rounds) Func _HPSleep($iSleep, $fMs = 1) ; default is milliseconds, otherwise microseconds (1 ms = 1000 µs) If $fMs Then $iSleep *= 1000 ; convert to ms DllCall($hDll, "dword", "NtDelayExecution", "int", 0, "int64*", -10 * $iSleep) EndFunc ;==>_HPSleep would return nothing shorter than 15ms. Then I noticed something odd. When opening Media Player Classic Home Cinema, loading a video, stopping it and running the script again, I could finally get results that were pretty close to how long I want the script to pause, down to 1ms. I even checked the sate of the cores of my CPUs, and they were throttling as always. It doesn't matter if MPC-HC's window is minimized or not, as long as I start and stop a video, timers and sleep functions in AutoIt finally return somewhat precise numbers. I even tried other media players, with varying results. So why is it that although MPC-HC (and other players) seems idle in the task manager, it has positive influence on sleep commands in AutoIt? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Sven Posted April 2, 2013 Share Posted April 2, 2013 (edited) That wasn't an april's fool posting in case you were thinking that. I'm also wondering if there's a way to reproduce the observed effect in AutoIt. Edited April 2, 2013 by Sven Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BrewManNH Posted April 2, 2013 Share Posted April 2, 2013 There are ways of setting the max/min setting for the resolution of timers in windows using MultiMedia timer functions. These are probably being used when there's a video playing to keep things in sync better.http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/dd743609(v=vs.85).aspx If I posted any code, assume that code was written using the latest release version unless stated otherwise. Also, if it doesn't work on XP I can't help with that because I don't have access to XP, and I'm not going to.Give a programmer the correct code and he can do his work for a day. Teach a programmer to debug and he can do his work for a lifetime - by Chirag GudeHow to ask questions the smart way! I hereby grant any person the right to use any code I post, that I am the original author of, on the autoitscript.com forums, unless I've specifically stated otherwise in the code or the thread post. If you do use my code all I ask, as a courtesy, is to make note of where you got it from. Back up and restore Windows user files _Array.au3 - Modified array functions that include support for 2D arrays. - ColorChooser - An add-on for SciTE that pops up a color dialog so you can select and paste a color code into a script. - Customizable Splashscreen GUI w/Progress Bar - Create a custom "splash screen" GUI with a progress bar and custom label. - _FileGetProperty - Retrieve the properties of a file - SciTE Toolbar - A toolbar demo for use with the SciTE editor - GUIRegisterMsg demo - Demo script to show how to use the Windows messages to interact with controls and your GUI. - Latin Square password generator Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Sven Posted April 3, 2013 Share Posted April 3, 2013 (edited) Thanks. "timeBeginPeriod" is exactly what I needed. It also shows that AutoIt's sleep() function is indeed hardcoded to go as low as 10ms. Here's a new code example: expandcollapse popup$hDll_ntdll = DllOpen("ntdll.dll") $hDll_winmm = DllOpen("winmm.dll") $rounds = 500 $resolution = 0 $result1 = _test(); tests for and shows the standard timer resolution MsgBox(0, "test 1", "Example for standard timer resolution" & @CRLF & @CRLF & "total: " & $result1 & @CRLF & "average: " & $result1 / $rounds) $result2 = _test(1); sets timer resolution to 1ms and performs test MsgBox(0, "test 1", "Example for 1ms timer resolution" & @CRLF & @CRLF & "total: " & $result2 & @CRLF & "average: " & $result2 / $rounds) $result1 = _test(); to show that the timer resolution was successfully reset MsgBox(0, "test 1", "Example for standard timer resolution" & @CRLF & @CRLF & "total: " & $result1 & @CRLF & "average: " & $result1 / $rounds) Func _Test($highPrecision = 0) Sleep(1000) $begin = TimerInit() For $i = 1 To $rounds _HPSleep(1, 1, $highPrecision) Next $dif = TimerDiff($begin) Return ($dif) EndFunc ;==>_Test Func _HPSleep($iSleep, $fMs = 1, $highPrecision = 0) ; default is milliseconds, otherwise microseconds (1 ms = 1000 µs) If $fMs Then $iSleep *= 1000 ; convert to ms if $highPrecision > 0 Then DllCall($hDll_winmm, "int", "timeBeginPeriod", "int", $highPrecision) DllCall($hDll_ntdll, "dword", "NtDelayExecution", "int", 0, "int64*", -10 * $iSleep) if $highPrecision > 0 Then DllCall($hDll_winmm, "int", "timeEndPeriod", "int", $highPrecision) EndFunc ;==>_HPSleep A word of caution, directly from Microsoft, http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/dd757624(v=vs.85).aspx This function affects a global Windows setting. Windows uses the lowest value (that is, highest resolution) requested by any process. Setting a higher resolution can improve the accuracy of time-out intervals in wait functions. However, it can also reduce overall system performance, because the thread scheduler switches tasks more often. High resolutions can also prevent the CPU power management system from entering power-saving modes. Setting a higher resolution does not improve the accuracy of the high-resolution performance counter. Edited April 3, 2013 by Sven photonblaster and paw 1 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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