| | Chrono |
| | ====== |
| |
|
| | When including the additional header file :file:`pybind11/chrono.h` conversions |
| | from C++11 chrono datatypes to python datetime objects are automatically enabled. |
| | This header also enables conversions of python floats (often from sources such |
| | as ``time.monotonic()``, ``time.perf_counter()`` and ``time.process_time()``) |
| | into durations. |
| |
|
| | An overview of clocks in C++11 |
| | |
| |
|
| | A point of confusion when using these conversions is the differences between |
| | clocks provided in C++11. There are three clock types defined by the C++11 |
| | standard and users can define their own if needed. Each of these clocks have |
| | different properties and when converting to and from python will give different |
| | results. |
| |
|
| | The first clock defined by the standard is ``std::chrono::system_clock``. This |
| | clock measures the current date and time. However, this clock changes with to |
| | updates to the operating system time. For example, if your time is synchronised |
| | with a time server this clock will change. This makes this clock a poor choice |
| | for timing purposes but good for measuring the wall time. |
| |
|
| | The second clock defined in the standard is ``std::chrono::steady_clock``. |
| | This clock ticks at a steady rate and is never adjusted. This makes it excellent |
| | for timing purposes, however the value in this clock does not correspond to the |
| | current date and time. Often this clock will be the amount of time your system |
| | has been on, although it does not have to be. This clock will never be the same |
| | clock as the system clock as the system clock can change but steady clocks |
| | cannot. |
| |
|
| | The third clock defined in the standard is ``std::chrono::high_resolution_clock``. |
| | This clock is the clock that has the highest resolution out of the clocks in the |
| | system. It is normally a typedef to either the system clock or the steady clock |
| | but can be its own independent clock. This is important as when using these |
| | conversions as the types you get in python for this clock might be different |
| | depending on the system. |
| | If it is a typedef of the system clock, python will get datetime objects, but if |
| | it is a different clock they will be timedelta objects. |
| |
|
| | Provided conversions |
| | |
| |
|
| | .. rubric:: C++ to Python |
| |
|
| | - ``std::chrono::system_clock::time_point`` β ``datetime.datetime`` |
| | System clock times are converted to python datetime instances. They are |
| | in the local timezone, but do not have any timezone information attached |
| | to them (they are naive datetime objects). |
| |
|
| | - ``std::chrono::duration`` β ``datetime.timedelta`` |
| | Durations are converted to timedeltas, any precision in the duration |
| | greater than microseconds is lost by rounding towards zero. |
| |
|
| | - ``std::chrono::[other_clocks]::time_point`` β ``datetime.timedelta`` |
| | Any clock time that is not the system clock is converted to a time delta. |
| | This timedelta measures the time from the clocks epoch to now. |
| |
|
| | .. rubric:: Python to C++ |
| |
|
| | - ``datetime.datetime`` or ``datetime.date`` or ``datetime.time`` β ``std::chrono::system_clock::time_point`` |
| | Date/time objects are converted into system clock timepoints. Any |
| | timezone information is ignored and the type is treated as a naive |
| | object. |
| |
|
| | - ``datetime.timedelta`` β ``std::chrono::duration`` |
| | Time delta are converted into durations with microsecond precision. |
| |
|
| | - ``datetime.timedelta`` β ``std::chrono::[other_clocks]::time_point`` |
| | Time deltas that are converted into clock timepoints are treated as |
| | the amount of time from the start of the clocks epoch. |
| |
|
| | - ``float`` β ``std::chrono::duration`` |
| | Floats that are passed to C++ as durations be interpreted as a number of |
| | seconds. These will be converted to the duration using ``duration_cast`` |
| | from the float. |
| |
|
| | - ``float`` β ``std::chrono::[other_clocks]::time_point`` |
| | Floats that are passed to C++ as time points will be interpreted as the |
| | number of seconds from the start of the clocks epoch. |
| |
|