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I created an App which uses Timer class to callback a method at a certain time of a day and recall it every 24 hours after that.

I use Ticks to signify 24 hours later. (int) TimeSpan.FromHours(24).TotalMilliseconds I use that to retrieve the ticks for 24 hours.

This works fine for me but on different computers, the trigger time is way off.

Anyway to debug this ? How should I fight/handle this issue ....

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  • I don't see you using ticks in the code posted up there. Also, what do you mean by "way off"? What is an acceptable tolerance for your purposes?
    – Ani
    Jun 29, 2012 at 18:40
  • Scheduling isn't a trivial feature. Windows has the built in Schedule Task feature, which would probably be a better way to do your scheduling. This still does not mean it would run exactly the same on all machines, though - clocks by default will not stay in perfect sync. Jun 29, 2012 at 18:42
  • @ananthonline, That is my ticks as you convert it to int you would get 86400000, tolerance by minutes not hours... Way off by 6 hours minimum.
    – Reza M.
    Jun 29, 2012 at 18:54
  • @PaulPhillips, Scheduling is great but my Application is running 24/7 with other functionality, so scheduling will not be possible unless it can trigger a certain method in the application. Also, I know computer to computer timers are different but 6 hour fluctuation is outrageous. :)
    – Reza M.
    Jun 29, 2012 at 18:54
  • Please show us a short but complete example to reproduce the problem.
    – Tim S.
    Jun 29, 2012 at 18:59

3 Answers 3

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How much is "way off" to you? If you want an app to run at a specific time, schedule it for that specific time, not 24 hours from the time it finishes - you're inevitably going to see some slippage doing it that way because the time will always be off the next day X seconds, where X is how long the program took to complete the previous day.

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  • 6 hours off in lucky cases and the app is always running so a scheduler which calls an app is not possible.
    – Reza M.
    Jun 29, 2012 at 18:43
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How "way off" yes desktop computers clocks frequently fluctuate by a second or more every day, they generally use a NTP server to correct these fluctuations. But its just the nature of the beast.

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  • fluctuates by a couple hours if lucky :)
    – Reza M.
    Jun 29, 2012 at 18:43
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First of all, there is no "my ticks" because a Tick is a well-defined value.

A single tick represents one hundred nanoseconds or one ten-millionth of a second. There are 10,000 ticks in a millisecond.

A DateTime object also has a Ticks property that you can use to access it. I wrote some simple code that I've posted here worked great for me, producing perfect results.

I see no reason your implementation should drift so much. Please make a sample that consistently produces the problem or post the relevant pieces of your own source.

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