I am trying to implement random time sleep (in Golang)
r := rand.Intn(10)
time.Sleep(100 * time.Millisecond) //working
time.Sleep(r * time.Microsecond) // Not working (mismatched types int and time.Duration)
I am trying to implement random time sleep (in Golang)
r := rand.Intn(10)
time.Sleep(100 * time.Millisecond) //working
time.Sleep(r * time.Microsecond) // Not working (mismatched types int and time.Duration)
Match the types of argument to time.Sleep
:
r := rand.Intn(10)
time.Sleep(time.Duration(r) * time.Microsecond)
This works because time.Duration
has int64
as its underlying type:
type Duration int64
time.Sleep((rand.Int63n(10)) * time.Second)
I tried to pass in int64, but even that doesn't work. @DmytroBogatov is probably correct.
Jun 24, 2019 at 6:35
time.Sleep(time.Duration(rand.Int63n(10))*time.Second)
. There is no automatic type casting in Go. As for my answer it is still correct: golang.org/pkg/time/#Duration
time.Second
is an int64
and rand.Int63n()
also returns an int64
, then why is there a type mismatch during multiplication ?
Jun 24, 2019 at 19:31
If you try to run same rand.Intn several times, you will see always the same number in output
Just like its written in the official docu https://golang.org/pkg/math/rand/
Top-level functions, such as Float64 and Int, use a default shared Source that produces a deterministic sequence of values each time a program is run. Use the Seed function to initialize the default Source if different behavior is required for each run.
It rather should look like
rand.Seed(time.Now().UnixNano())
r := rand.Intn(100)
time.Sleep(time.Duration(r) * time.Millisecond)