The stop()
method returns the aggregated data as a DataFrame
. However, you can also access the raw data if you need to. The timer
class stores the timings in two vectors: durations
and tags
, both public class members. The snippet below demonstrates how to access them:
Rcpp::cppFunction(' DataFrame demo_rnorm() { Rcpp::Timer timer; double x=0; for(int i = 0; i < 7; i++) { timer.tic("rnorm"); x += rnorm(1, 1)[0]; timer.toc("rnorm"); } DataFrame times = DataFrame::create( Named("Durations") = timer.durations, Named("Tags") = timer.tags); return(times); }', depends = "rcpptimer" ) demo_rnorm()
You can see that the tags
vector contains the names of the timings, and the durations
vector contains the actual timings (in nanoseconds).
Sometimes, you may want to access the results of your Timer
instance before all timers have finished. This is possible. Due to the way the Timer
class processes the data, it is also very efficient. The .aggregate()
method (called by .stop()
) will update the results if new timings have been observed. The snippet below demonstrates this:
List test_update() { Rcpp::Timer timer; timer.autoreturn = false; List L = List::create(); { Rcpp::Timer::ScopedTimer scoped_timer(timer, "t1"); timer.tic("t2"); std::this_thread::sleep_for(std::chrono::nanoseconds(5)); timer.toc("t2"); DataFrame results1 = timer.stop(); timer.print_warnings(); L.push_back(results1); timer.tic("t2"); std::this_thread::sleep_for(std::chrono::nanoseconds(500)); timer.toc("t2"); timer.tic("t3"); std::this_thread::sleep_for(std::chrono::nanoseconds(500)); timer.toc("t3"); } DataFrame results2 = timer.stop(); L.push_back(results2); return (L); }
We use the above function in rcpptimer for testing purposes:
rcpptimer:::test_update()
You can see that the timer "t2" has been updated with the new timing. This example also shows that it is unnecessary to stop all timers before calling .stop()
. In this example, timer "t1" is started before calculating the results for the first time, but it is stopped before calling .stop()
a second time.
Also, note that we need to manually call .print_warnings()
if we want to print warnings early. Otherwise, they will only be printed upon destruction of the Timer
instance (e.g., when your Timer
object goes out of scope).
You can reset the timer at any time by calling the reset()
method. This method will clear your instance of the Timer
class and reset the internal state. The example below demonstrates how to use it:
List test_reset() { Rcpp::Timer timer; { Rcpp::Timer::ScopedTimer scoped_timer(timer, "t1"); timer.autoreturn = false; timer.tic("t2"); std::this_thread::sleep_for(std::chrono::nanoseconds(5)); timer.toc("t2"); } DataFrame results1 = timer.stop(); timer.reset(); timer.tic("t3"); List L = List::create(); L.push_back(results1); timer.toc("t3"); DataFrame results2 = timer.stop(); L.push_back(results2); return (L); }
We use the above function in rcpptimer for testing purposes:
rcpptimer:::test_reset()
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