template <class ToDuration, class Rep, class Period> constexpr ToDuration duration_cast(const duration<Rep,Period>& d); | (since C++11) |
Converts a std::chrono::duration
to a duration of different type ToDuration
.
No implicit conversions are used. Multiplications and divisions are avoided where possible, if it is known at compile time that one or more parameters are 1
. Computations are done in the widest type available and converted, as if by static_cast
, to the result type only when finished.
Parameters
d | - | duration to convert |
Return value
d
converted to a duration of type ToDuration
.
Notes
The function does not participate in the overload resolution unless ToDuration
is an instance of std::chrono::duration
.
Casting between floating-point durations or between integer durations where the source period is exactly divisible by the target period (e.g. hours to minutes) can be performed implicitly, no duration_cast
is needed.
Casting from a floating-point duration to an integer duration is subject to undefined behavior when the floating-point value is NaN, infinity, or too large to be representable by the target's integer type.
Example
This example measures the execution time of a function.
#include <iostream> #include <chrono> #include <thread> void f() { std::this_thread::sleep_for(std::chrono::seconds(1)); } int main() { auto t1 = std::chrono::high_resolution_clock::now(); f(); auto t2 = std::chrono::high_resolution_clock::now(); std::cout << "f() took " << std::chrono::duration_cast<std::chrono::milliseconds>(t2 - t1).count() << " milliseconds\n"; }
Output:
f() took 1000 milliseconds
See also
converts a time point to another time point on the same clock, with a different duration (function template) | |
(C++17) | converts a duration to another, rounding down (function template) |
(C++17) | converts a duration to another, rounding up (function template) |
(C++17) | converts a duration to another, rounding to nearest, ties to even (function template) |
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