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sleep(1);   #waits/sleeps for one second then continue running the script

Q1. How to make this 1/100 of a second? which of these work: 0,01 or 0.01 or .01 ?

Q2. What are alternatives? wait(); or snap(); ?? how do they differ (more/less precise)?

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  • 2
    A better question is "Is sleep(x) the best approach to solve ___________"? What is the problem you're trying to solve with sleep()? It's a powerful tool that is abused in every language when there are better solutions.
    – corsiKa
    Mar 27, 2011 at 1:34
  • @glowcoder +1: was unaware of the language-agnostic abuse shadowing sleep
    – Sam
    Mar 27, 2011 at 1:54

4 Answers 4

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Q1. How to make this 1/100 of a second? which of these work: 0,01 or 0.01 or .01 ?

None of the above!

usleep is what you want for fractions of a second. usleep(100000) will sleep for one tenth of one second.

Your other options are time_nanosleep which takes both seconds and freaking nanoseconds (one billion of which are one second), and time_sleep_until, which will sleep until a particular unix timestamp has been reached.

Be aware that your system might not have millisecond resolution, no less nanosecond resolution. You might have trouble sleeping for precisely tiny, tiny amounts of time.

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  • @Alix, you are probably right, given the context is sub-second sleeping.
    – Charles
    Mar 27, 2011 at 2:10
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Late answer... but you can use time_nanosleep(), i.e:

To sleep for 1/10 of a second (0.1):

time_nanosleep(0, 100000000);

To sleep for 1/100 of a second (0.01):

time_nanosleep(0, 10000000);

To sleep for 1/1000 of a second (0.001):

time_nanosleep(0, 1000000);
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Use usleep in which you can pass in microseconds,

so for your case you can call usleep(10000) to sleep for 1/100 of a second.

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What you are looking for is usleep() or time_nanosleep().

As for your second question, all these methods come with a high level of precision however I would advise you to test on your specific system if it's critical.

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