497

How do you tell a Ruby program to wait an arbitrary amount of time before moving on to the next line of code?

7 Answers 7

801

Like this:

sleep(num_secs)

The num_secs value can be an integer or float.

Also, if you're writing this within a Rails app, or have included the ActiveSupport library in your project, you can construct longer intervals using the following convenience syntax:

sleep(4.minutes)
# or, even longer...
sleep(2.hours); sleep(3.days) # etc., etc.
# or shorter
sleep(0.5) # half a second
0
145

Use sleep like so:

sleep 2

That'll sleep for 2 seconds.

Be careful to give an argument. If you just run sleep, the process will sleep forever. (This is useful when you want a thread to sleep until it's woken.)

3
  • 3
    Wait, will it sleep forever, or until it's "woken"? What does "woken" even mean? Commented Sep 1, 2013 at 4:18
  • 4
    @anthropomorphic It's referring to when another thread calls Thread#run. Commented Sep 28, 2013 at 15:40
  • Actually, when another thread calls Thread#wakeup, I suppose.
    – chesterbr
    Commented Feb 2, 2014 at 6:33
12

I find until very useful with sleep. example:

> time = Time.now
> sleep 2.seconds until Time.now > time + 10.seconds # breaks when true
> # or
> sleep 2 and puts 'still sleeping' until Time.now > time + 10
> # or
> sleep 1.seconds until !req.loading # suggested by ohsully
6
  • 4
    This is the same thing as sleep(10.seconds) Commented May 31, 2020 at 14:36
  • Yeah, here it is the same because it uses the same input (time) as offered by sleep. I wanted to highlight how until can be used to sleep until any condition is achieved (also love the how natural the syntax feels)
    – Varun Garg
    Commented May 31, 2020 at 16:07
  • This makes my head hurt. Can you provide a different example than this to showcase the value of using until here instead of just sleep(10.seconds)? Commented Jan 3, 2021 at 16:54
  • 1
    Suppose you wanted to block until a request returns: sleep 1.seconds until !req.loading
    – ohsully
    Commented Jan 4, 2021 at 10:11
  • This is not exactly the same thing as sleep(10). The kernel may wake the thread early. So if you must sleep for at least 10 seconds, you need a construct like this. See apidock.com/ruby/Kernel/sleep
    – MZB
    Commented Jan 20, 2021 at 22:43
7

Like this

sleep(no_of_seconds)

Or you may pass other possible arguments like:

sleep(5.seconds)

sleep(5.minutes)

sleep(5.hours)

sleep(5.days)

2

Implementation of seconds/minutes/hours, which are rails methods. Note that implicit returns aren't needed, but they look cleaner, so I prefer them. I'm not sure Rails even has .days or if it goes further, but these are the ones I need.

class Integer
   def seconds
      return self
   end
   def minutes
      return self * 60
   end
   def hours
      return self * 3600
   end
   def days
      return self * 86400
   end
end

After this, you can do: sleep 5.seconds to sleep for 5 seconds. You can do sleep 5.minutes to sleep for 5 min. You can do sleep 5.hours to sleep for 5 hours. And finally, you can do sleep 5.days to sleep for 5 days... You can add any method that return the value of self * (amount of seconds in that timeframe). As an exercise, try implementing it for months!

0

sleep 6 will sleep for 6 seconds. For a longer duration, you can also use sleep(6.minutes) or sleep(6.hours).

3
  • 4
    Not sure about the downvotes on this, but it could be that minutes() and hours() are methods on numerics added by Ruby on Rails - so not standard available in Ruby - in the ActiveSupport::Duration class. They're quite convenient though. Commented Sep 18, 2017 at 8:00
  • 13
    I think the primary reason for downvotes is that @vijaya_chowdary basically reposted the voted correct answer 8 years later. I would consider it is strange at the least...
    – Sergio
    Commented May 18, 2018 at 17:37
  • 1
    I downvoted for exactly that. It's not standard ruby.
    – hayesk
    Commented Sep 5, 2018 at 17:37
-2

This is an example of using sleep with sidekiq

require 'sidekiq'

class PlainOldRuby
  include Sidekiq::Worker

  def perform(how_hard="super hard", how_long=10)
    sleep how_long
    puts "Workin' #{how_hard}"
  end
end

sleep for 10 seconds and print out "Working super hard" .

1
  • 8
    This is writing (sin²𝑥+cos²𝑥) instead of 1.
    – karatedog
    Commented May 31, 2021 at 12:03

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