What is the Python equivalent of Matlab's tic and toc functions?
14 Answers
Apart from timeit
which ThiefMaster mentioned, a simple way to do it is just (after importing time
):
t = time.time()
# do stuff
elapsed = time.time() - t
I have a helper class I like to use:
class Timer(object):
def __init__(self, name=None):
self.name = name
def __enter__(self):
self.tstart = time.time()
def __exit__(self, type, value, traceback):
if self.name:
print('[%s]' % self.name,)
print('Elapsed: %s' % (time.time() - self.tstart))
It can be used as a context manager:
with Timer('foo_stuff'):
# do some foo
# do some stuff
Sometimes I find this technique more convenient than timeit
- it all depends on what you want to measure.
-
29@eat: I respectfully disagree. People have been using the unix
time
command to measure runtimes of programs for ever, and this method replicates this inside Python code. I see nothing wrong with it, as long as it's the right tool for the job.timeit
isn't always that, and a profiler is a much more heavyweight solution for most needs May 2, 2011 at 3:27 -
4For the last line I would suggest
print 'Elapsed: %.2f seconds % (time.time() - self.tstart)'
. It is hard to understand without the %.2f. Thanks for great idea. Jun 19, 2013 at 15:01 -
7This looks very convenient at first glance, but in practice requires one to indent the code block one wants to time, which can be quite inconvenient depending on the length of the code block and the editor of choice. Still an elegant solution, which behaves correctly in the case of nested use.– StefanNov 15, 2013 at 8:44
-
10@rysqui - Isn't the current time always a larger number than a previous time? I would think that
elapsed = time.time() - t
is the form that always yields a positive value. Nov 7, 2017 at 22:22 -
3@ScottSmith hmmm. yeah i have no idea what i was thinking when I wrote that comment 2 years ago. It seems super wrong, and you seem super correct. Not sure what i was thinking.– rysquiNov 9, 2017 at 1:41
I had the same question when I migrated to python from Matlab. With the help of this thread I was able to construct an exact analog of the Matlab tic()
and toc()
functions. Simply insert the following code at the top of your script.
import time
def TicTocGenerator():
# Generator that returns time differences
ti = 0 # initial time
tf = time.time() # final time
while True:
ti = tf
tf = time.time()
yield tf-ti # returns the time difference
TicToc = TicTocGenerator() # create an instance of the TicTocGen generator
# This will be the main function through which we define both tic() and toc()
def toc(tempBool=True):
# Prints the time difference yielded by generator instance TicToc
tempTimeInterval = next(TicToc)
if tempBool:
print( "Elapsed time: %f seconds.\n" %tempTimeInterval )
def tic():
# Records a time in TicToc, marks the beginning of a time interval
toc(False)
That's it! Now we are ready to fully use tic()
and toc()
just as in Matlab. For example
tic()
time.sleep(5)
toc() # returns "Elapsed time: 5.00 seconds."
Actually, this is more versatile than the built-in Matlab functions. Here, you could create another instance of the TicTocGenerator
to keep track of multiple operations, or just to time things differently. For instance, while timing a script, we can now time each piece of the script seperately, as well as the entire script. (I will provide a concrete example)
TicToc2 = TicTocGenerator() # create another instance of the TicTocGen generator
def toc2(tempBool=True):
# Prints the time difference yielded by generator instance TicToc2
tempTimeInterval = next(TicToc2)
if tempBool:
print( "Elapsed time 2: %f seconds.\n" %tempTimeInterval )
def tic2():
# Records a time in TicToc2, marks the beginning of a time interval
toc2(False)
Now you should be able to time two separate things: In the following example, we time the total script and parts of a script separately.
tic()
time.sleep(5)
tic2()
time.sleep(3)
toc2() # returns "Elapsed time 2: 5.00 seconds."
toc() # returns "Elapsed time: 8.00 seconds."
Actually, you do not even need to use tic()
each time. If you have a series of commands that you want to time, then you can write
tic()
time.sleep(1)
toc() # returns "Elapsed time: 1.00 seconds."
time.sleep(2)
toc() # returns "Elapsed time: 2.00 seconds."
time.sleep(3)
toc() # returns "Elapsed time: 3.00 seconds."
# and so on...
I hope that this is helpful.
-
5I feel like this answer is highly underrated. Thank you so much for sharing!– zeluspFeb 4, 2021 at 4:11
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1“this is more versatile than the built-in Matlab functions” — I suggest you read the MATLAB docs, you’ll see your solution is not nearly as convenient when measuring multiple things at once. And of course this is not an exact analog. Nov 27, 2022 at 15:08
The absolute best analog of tic and toc would be to simply define them in python.
def tic():
#Homemade version of matlab tic and toc functions
import time
global startTime_for_tictoc
startTime_for_tictoc = time.time()
def toc():
import time
if 'startTime_for_tictoc' in globals():
print "Elapsed time is " + str(time.time() - startTime_for_tictoc) + " seconds."
else:
print "Toc: start time not set"
Then you can use them as:
tic()
# do stuff
toc()
-
6This will not behave correctly in the case of nested use of
tic
andtoc
, which Matlab supports. A little more sophistication would be required.– StefanNov 15, 2013 at 8:37 -
2I have implemented similar functions in my own code when I needed some basic timing. I would however remove the
import time
outside of both functions, since it can take potentially quite some time. Nov 15, 2013 at 17:19 -
If you insist on using this technique, and you need it to handle nested tic/toc, make the global a list and let
tic
push to it andtoc
pop from it. Aug 24, 2016 at 1:26 -
1Also I read elsewhere that
timeit.default_timer()
is better thantime.time()
becausetime.clock()
might be more appropriate depending on OS– MiguelFeb 14, 2017 at 21:23 -
@AhmedFasih That's what my answer does, though more things could be improved. Apr 23, 2020 at 7:32
Usually, IPython's %time
, %timeit
, %prun
and %lprun
(if one has line_profiler
installed) satisfy my profiling needs quite well. However, a use case for tic-toc
-like functionality arose when I tried to profile calculations that were interactively driven, i.e., by the user's mouse motion in a GUI. I felt like spamming tic
s and toc
s in the sources while testing interactively would be the fastest way to reveal the bottlenecks. I went with Eli Bendersky's Timer
class, but wasn't fully happy, since it required me to change the indentation of my code, which can be inconvenient in some editors and confuses the version control system. Moreover, there may be the need to measure the time between points in different functions, which wouldn't work with the with
statement. After trying lots of Python cleverness, here is the simple solution that I found worked best:
from time import time
_tstart_stack = []
def tic():
_tstart_stack.append(time())
def toc(fmt="Elapsed: %s s"):
print fmt % (time() - _tstart_stack.pop())
Since this works by pushing the starting times on a stack, it will work correctly for multiple levels of tic
s and toc
s. It also allows one to change the format string of the toc
statement to display additional information, which I liked about Eli's Timer
class.
For some reason I got concerned with the overhead of a pure Python implementation, so I tested a C extension module as well:
#include <Python.h>
#include <mach/mach_time.h>
#define MAXDEPTH 100
uint64_t start[MAXDEPTH];
int lvl=0;
static PyObject* tic(PyObject *self, PyObject *args) {
start[lvl++] = mach_absolute_time();
Py_RETURN_NONE;
}
static PyObject* toc(PyObject *self, PyObject *args) {
return PyFloat_FromDouble(
(double)(mach_absolute_time() - start[--lvl]) / 1000000000L);
}
static PyObject* res(PyObject *self, PyObject *args) {
return tic(NULL, NULL), toc(NULL, NULL);
}
static PyMethodDef methods[] = {
{"tic", tic, METH_NOARGS, "Start timer"},
{"toc", toc, METH_NOARGS, "Stop timer"},
{"res", res, METH_NOARGS, "Test timer resolution"},
{NULL, NULL, 0, NULL}
};
PyMODINIT_FUNC
inittictoc(void) {
Py_InitModule("tictoc", methods);
}
This is for MacOSX, and I have omitted code to check if lvl
is out of bounds for brevity. While tictoc.res()
yields a resolution of about 50 nanoseconds on my system, I found that the jitter of measuring any Python statement is easily in the microsecond range (and much more when used from IPython). At this point, the overhead of the Python implementation becomes negligible, so that it can be used with the same confidence as the C implementation.
I found that the usefulness of the tic-toc
-approach is practically limited to code blocks that take more than 10 microseconds to execute. Below that, averaging strategies like in timeit
are required to get a faithful measurement.
-
1Extremely elegant, @Stefan - can't believe this is so low rated. Thanks!– thclarkNov 8, 2016 at 15:55
You can use tic
and toc
from ttictoc
. Install it with
pip install ttictoc
And just import them in your script as follow
from ttictoc import tic,toc
tic()
# Some code
print(toc())
I have just created a module [tictoc.py] for achieving nested tic tocs, which is what Matlab does.
from time import time
tics = []
def tic():
tics.append(time())
def toc():
if len(tics)==0:
return None
else:
return time()-tics.pop()
And it works this way:
from tictoc import tic, toc
# This keeps track of the whole process
tic()
# Timing a small portion of code (maybe a loop)
tic()
# -- Nested code here --
# End
toc() # This returns the elapse time (in seconds) since the last invocation of tic()
toc() # This does the same for the first tic()
I hope it helps.
-
-
1I must warn you that this might not behave as desired when used simultaneously by more than 1 module, since (AFAIK) modules behave like singletons. Jun 27, 2017 at 18:04
-
1This is not how MATLAB’s tic/top works. There is no stack. You can call
toc
repeatedly to get the time from the same lasttic
. Nested timings work through an output argument totic
, which you then pass in totoc
. Nov 27, 2022 at 15:16
Have a look at the timeit
module.
It's not really equivalent but if the code you want to time is inside a function you can easily use it.
-
Yes,
timeit
is best for benchmarks. It doesn't even have to be a single function, you can pass abritarily complex statements.– user395760May 1, 2011 at 16:49 -
10Well, passing code that is not an extremely simple function call as a string is very ugly. May 1, 2011 at 16:50
-
It also work with lambdas like this (straight from the documentation):
timeit.timeit(lambda: "-".join(map(str, range(100))), number=10000)
Jul 27, 2021 at 7:27
pip install easy-tictoc
In the code:
from tictoc import tic, toc
tic()
#Some code
toc()
Disclaimer: I'm the author of this library.
-
Please don't simply copy another answer, even if it is your own. stackoverflow.com/a/59271862/8239061 Dec 10, 2019 at 17:42
Updating Eli's answer to Python 3:
class Timer(object):
def __init__(self, name=None, filename=None):
self.name = name
self.filename = filename
def __enter__(self):
self.tstart = time.time()
def __exit__(self, type, value, traceback):
message = 'Elapsed: %.2f seconds' % (time.time() - self.tstart)
if self.name:
message = '[%s] ' % self.name + message
print(message)
if self.filename:
with open(self.filename,'a') as file:
print(str(datetime.datetime.now())+": ",message,file=file)
Just like Eli's, it can be used as a context manager:
import time
with Timer('Count'):
for i in range(0,10_000_000):
pass
Output:
[Count] Elapsed: 0.27 seconds
I have also updated it to print the units of time reported (seconds) and trim the number of digits as suggested by Can, and with the option of also appending to a log file. You must import datetime to use the logging feature:
import time
import datetime
with Timer('Count', 'log.txt'):
for i in range(0,10_000_000):
pass
Building on Stefan and antonimmo's answers, I ended up putting
def Tictoc():
start_stack = []
start_named = {}
def tic(name=None):
if name is None:
start_stack.append(time())
else:
start_named[name] = time()
def toc(name=None):
if name is None:
start = start_stack.pop()
else:
start = start_named.pop(name)
elapsed = time() - start
return elapsed
return tic, toc
in a utils.py
module, and I use it with a
from utils import Tictoc
tic, toc = Tictoc()
This way
- you can simply use
tic()
,toc()
and nest them like in Matlab - alternatively, you can name them:
tic(1)
,toc(1)
ortic('very-important-block')
,toc('very-important-block')
and timers with different names won't interfere - importing them this way prevents interference between modules using it.
(here toc does not print the elapsed time, but returns it.)
-
1MATLAB’s tic/toc don’t nest this way, there’a no stack. I do like the idea of named timers. Nov 27, 2022 at 15:18
This can also be done using a wrapper. Very general way of keeping time.
The wrapper in this example code wraps any function and prints the amount of time needed to execute the function:
def timethis(f):
import time
def wrapped(*args, **kwargs):
start = time.time()
r = f(*args, **kwargs)
print "Executing {0} took {1} seconds".format(f.func_name, time.time()-start)
return r
return wrapped
@timethis
def thistakestime():
for x in range(10000000):
pass
thistakestime()
-
The wrapper function, timethis is called a decorator. A bit more detailed explanation, here: medium.com/pythonhive/…– MirceaJan 29, 2018 at 14:44
I changed @Eli Bendersky's answer a little bit to use the ctor __init__()
and dtor __del__()
to do the timing, so that it can be used more conveniently without indenting the original code:
class Timer(object):
def __init__(self, name=None):
self.name = name
self.tstart = time.time()
def __del__(self):
if self.name:
print '%s elapsed: %.2fs' % (self.name, time.time() - self.tstart)
else:
print 'Elapsed: %.2fs' % (time.time() - self.tstart)
To use, simple put Timer("blahblah") at the beginning of some local scope. Elapsed time will be printed at the end of the scope:
for i in xrange(5):
timer = Timer("eigh()")
x = numpy.random.random((4000,4000));
x = (x+x.T)/2
numpy.linalg.eigh(x)
print i+1
timer = None
It prints out:
1
eigh() elapsed: 10.13s
2
eigh() elapsed: 9.74s
3
eigh() elapsed: 10.70s
4
eigh() elapsed: 10.25s
5
eigh() elapsed: 11.28s
-
3An issue with this implementation is the fact, that
timer
is not deleted after the last call, if any other code follows after thefor
loop. To get the last timer value, one should delete or overwrite thetimer
after thefor
loop, e.g. viatimer = None
. Jul 5, 2016 at 15:41 -
1@bastelflp Just realized that I misunderstood what you meant... Your suggestion has been incorporated in the code now. Thanks. Aug 30, 2017 at 5:38
This solution works for my profiling needs:
from time import time
import inspect
def tic():
tic.t = time()
def toc(message=None):
time_elapsed = time() - tic.t
if message is None:
message = inspect.currentframe().f_back.f_lineno
print(message, time_elapsed)
tic.t = time()
return time_elapsed
Then you can just paste a lot of toc()
s in your code, and you have a pretty powerful profiler. (message defaults to the caller's code line in file)
Based on the answer of @Maxim, here is a simplified solution:
def tictoc():
"""Python implementation of MATLAB tic-toc functionality."""
from time import perf_counter_ns
hashmap = {}
def tic(key: str=None) -> None:
"""named tic method"""
hashmap[key] = perf_counter_ns()
return None
def toc(key: str=None) -> float:
"""named toc method"""
initial_ns = hashmap[key]
current_ns = perf_counter_ns()
elapsed_ns = current_ns - initial_ns
elapsed_s = elapsed_ns / (10**9) # convert ns to s
print(f"Elapsed time is {elapsed_s} seconds.")
return elapsed_s
return tic, toc
Assuming it is stored in a file called utils.py
, it is used in the following manner:
from utils import tictoc
tic, toc = tictoc()
tic()
toc()
toc()
tic()
toc()
tic('foo')
toc('foo')
toc('foo')
toc()
Unlike the original, this version does not crash when you run toc()
multiple times and properly resets when running tic
while retaining the key-value timer functionality. It also removes an unnecessary list/array data structure and multiple conditional branches in the code, which induce slowdowns. Hashmap lookup times are constant at O^1, which is faster than resizing arrays. Also, I have switched to the perf_counter_ns
timer, which is based on perf_counter
and avoids the precision loss caused by the float
type.
If anyone wants to go lower level, here is a version using the Python C API:
// tictoc.c
#define PY_SSIZE_T_CLEAN // REQUIRED
#include <Python.h> // Python C API
#include <stdint.h> // uint64_t
#include <time.h> // timespec
#include <sys/time.h> // time types
#include <stdio.h> // printf
typedef struct {
uint64_t initial_ns;
uint64_t current_ns;
uint64_t elapsed_ns;
double elapsed_s;
} timer;
timer t;
struct timespec ts; // C11
// Unix POSIX clock time scaled to microseconds (us; 10^6 sec)
uint64_t posix_clock_time () {
timespec_get(&ts, TIME_UTC);
return ts.tv_sec * 1000000000 + ts.tv_nsec; // ns = 10^-9 s
}
// tic
static PyObject* tic(PyObject* self, PyObject* args) {
t.initial_ns = posix_clock_time();
Py_RETURN_NONE;
}
// toc
static PyObject* toc(PyObject* self, PyObject* args) {
t.current_ns = posix_clock_time();
t.elapsed_ns = t.current_ns - t.initial_ns;
t.elapsed_s = (double)t.elapsed_ns / (double)1000000000.0; // s = 10^9 ns
printf("Elapsed time is %f seconds.\n", t.elapsed_s);
return PyFloat_FromDouble(t.elapsed_s);
}
static PyMethodDef methods[] = {
{"tic", tic, METH_NOARGS, "Start timer"},
{"toc", toc, METH_NOARGS, "Stop timer"},
{NULL, NULL, 0, NULL}
};
static struct PyModuleDef tictoc = {
PyModuleDef_HEAD_INIT,
"tictoc", // name of module
"A timer function analogous to MATLAB's tic-toc.", // module documentation, may be NULL
-1, // size of per-interpreter state of module; -1 if module keeps state in global variables
methods
};
PyMODINIT_FUNC PyInit_tictoc(void) {
return PyModule_Create(&tictoc);
}
Install it with a setup.py
file:
# setup.py
from distutils.core import setup, Extension
module1 = Extension(
'tictoc',
sources = ['tictoc.c']
)
setup(name = 'tictoc',
version = '1.0',
description = 'The tictoc package',
ext_modules = [module1]
)
From the command line, run python setup.py build
and Bob's your uncle. This compiles to a shared library that provides basic tic-toc functionality similar to MATLAB:
from tictoc import tic, toc
tic()
toc()
toc()
tic()
toc()
toc()
tic = time.time()
andtoc = time.time()
, thenprint toc-tic, 'sec Elapsed'
As folks have said below, though,timeit
is more robust.tic = timeit.default_timer(); (U,S,V) = np.linalg.svd(A); toc = timeit.default_timer()
, thenprint toc-tic
.