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Obviously I can do and DateTime.Now.After - DateTime.Now.Before but there must be something more sophisticated.

Any tips appreciated.

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5 Answers

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egg timer

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+1 just because I chuckled... – j0rd4n Dec 19 '08 at 14:02
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Use a Profiler

Your approach will work nevertheless, but if you are looking for more sophisticated approaches. I'd suggest using a C# Profiler.

The advantages they have is:

  • You can even get a statement level breakup
  • No changes required in your codebase
  • Instrumentions generally have very less overhead, hence very accurate results can be obtained.

There are many available open-source as well.

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ah thanks very useful – DrG Dec 19 '08 at 13:26
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Tickcount is good, however i suggest running it 100 or 1000 times, and calculating an average. Not only makes it more measurable - in case of really fast/short functions, but helps dealing with some one-off effects caused by the overhead.

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I would definitely advise you to have a look at System.Diagnostics.Stopwatch

And when I looked around for more about Stopwatch I found this site;

Beware of the stopwatch

There mentioned another possibility

Process.TotalProcessorTime

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This is a great link – Nathan Koop Dec 19 '08 at 17:42

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