14

I want to get difference between two SYSTEMTIME variable. I saw someone asked this question here before, but he was told to convert both SYSTEMTIME structures to FILETIME.. Is there another way to get the difference?

SYSTEMTIME st;
GetSystemTime(&st);

---some code here---

  SYSTEMTIME st2;
  GetSystemTime(&st2);

st-st2?

1
  • 3
    Why can't you do what everybody recommends and convert the SYSTEMTIME to FILETIME? Jan 2, 2012 at 13:40

3 Answers 3

20
SYSTEMTIME operator-(const SYSTEMTIME& pSr,const SYSTEMTIME& pSl)
{
    SYSTEMTIME t_res;
    FILETIME v_ftime;
    ULARGE_INTEGER v_ui;
    __int64 v_right,v_left,v_res;
    SystemTimeToFileTime(&pSr,&v_ftime);
    v_ui.LowPart=v_ftime.dwLowDateTime;
    v_ui.HighPart=v_ftime.dwHighDateTime;
    v_right=v_ui.QuadPart;

    SystemTimeToFileTime(&pSl,&v_ftime);
    v_ui.LowPart=v_ftime.dwLowDateTime;
    v_ui.HighPart=v_ftime.dwHighDateTime;
    v_left=v_ui.QuadPart;

    v_res=v_right-v_left;

    v_ui.QuadPart=v_res;
    v_ftime.dwLowDateTime=v_ui.LowPart;
    v_ftime.dwHighDateTime=v_ui.HighPart;
    FileTimeToSystemTime(&v_ftime,&t_res);
    return t_res;
}
1
  • If right is a few seconds earlier then left...then it looks like you get a really big time as your answer? SYSTEMTIME is made of WORD members (unsigned), so it cannot represent negative time differences. Jul 29, 2017 at 22:02
7

It says pretty clearly on the MSDN documentation:

It is not recommended that you add and subtract values from the SYSTEMTIME structure to obtain relative times. Instead, you should

  • Convert the SYSTEMTIME structure to a FILETIME structure.
  • Copy the resulting FILETIME structure to a ULARGE_INTEGER structure.
  • Use normal 64-bit arithmetic on the ULARGE_INTEGER value.

Why not do exactly that?

2
  • 1
    i wanted to avoid this. but, I'll do what you suggested. how do i deduct the two ULARGE_INTEGER structure i created?
    – kakush
    Jan 2, 2012 at 9:20
  • You can just use a 64-bit int type for that. As also stated on MSDN ( msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/aa383742(v=VS.85).aspx ): Your C compiler may support 64-bit integers natively. For example, Microsoft Visual C++ supports the __int64 sized integer type. For more information, see the documentation included with your C compiler.
    – bobbymcr
    Jan 2, 2012 at 9:24
6

ft1 and ft2 are filetime structures

ULARGE_INTEGER ul1;
    ul1.LowPart = ft1.dwLowDateTime;
    ul1.HighPart = ft1.dwHighDateTime;

ULARGE_INTEGER ul2;
    ul2.LowPart = ft2.dwLowDateTime;
    ul2.HighPart = ft2.dwHighDateTime;


ul2.QuadPart -= ul1.QuadPart;

Difference in Milliseconds...

ULARGE_INTEGER uliRetValue;
    uliRetValue.QuadPart = 0;


    uliRetValue = ul2;
    uliRetValue.QuadPart /= 10;
    uliRetValue.QuadPart /= 1000; // To Milliseconds

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service, privacy policy and cookie policy

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.