Mercurial > emacs
changeset 73037:ce175d3f53fd
(Timers): Clarify about REPEAT when timer is delayed.
author | Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Thu, 21 Sep 2006 01:51:55 +0000 |
parents | 384cb0bcd86b |
children | fc2dc3f11c45 |
files | lispref/os.texi |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 14 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-) [+] |
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--- a/lispref/os.texi Thu Sep 21 01:34:03 2006 +0000 +++ b/lispref/os.texi Thu Sep 21 01:51:55 2006 +0000 @@ -1407,9 +1407,9 @@ @deffn Command run-at-time time repeat function &rest args This sets up a timer that calls the function @var{function} with arguments @var{args} at time @var{time}. If @var{repeat} is a number -(integer or floating point), the timer also runs every @var{repeat} -seconds after that. If @var{repeat} is @code{nil}, the timer runs -only once. +(integer or floating point), the timer is scheduled to run again every +@var{repeat} seconds after @var{time}. If @var{repeat} is @code{nil}, +the timer runs only once. @var{time} may specify an absolute or a relative time. @@ -1458,6 +1458,17 @@ @code{cancel-timer} (see below). @end deffn + A repeating timer nominally ought to run every @var{repeat} seconds, +but remember that any invocation of a timer can be late. Lateness of +one repetition has no effect on the scheduled time of the next +repetition. For instance, if Emacs is busy computing for long enough +to cover three scheduled repetitions of the timer, and then starts to +wait, it will immediately call the timer function three times in +immediate succession (presuming no other timers trigger before or +between them). If you want a timer to run again no less than @var{n} +seconds after the last invocation, don't use the @var{repeat} argument. +Instead, the timer function should explicitly reschedule the timer. + @defmac with-timeout (seconds timeout-forms@dots{}) body@dots{} Execute @var{body}, but give up after @var{seconds} seconds. If @var{body} finishes before the time is up, @code{with-timeout} returns