.toc()
on a
timer that was already stopped would cause a signed integer overflow.
This a minor change in CppTimer
as well as
Rcpp::Timer
.stop()
method of Rcpp::Timer
now
returns a data.frame
with the results. This is useful if
you want to set auto return to false and manually handle the results. It
is also possible to call aggregate()
and access the public
variable data
of Rcpp::Timer
.
data
is a map containing the results (Names, Mean, Standard
Deviation, Count). Look into the implementation of stop()
in “inst/rcpptimer.h” to see how this works.tic()
, toc()
and
ScopedTimer()
have default values now.print.rcpptimer
method to print the results of a
timer object. Timings will be scaled to a more readable unit
(e.g. milliseconds, seconds, minutes, hours) when appropriate..toc()
was called more than
once.CppTimer
to
Timer
as it is R-specific.?rcpptimer
).CppTimer
classRcpp::CppTimer::ScopedTimer
class. This can be
used to time the lifespan of an object until it goes out of scope. This
is useful for timing the duration of a function or a loop. The
fibonacci
example was updated to use this new class.toc()
statement).tic()
statement
was found.verbose
parameter to the Timer
class
to control whether above warnings should be printed or not (defaults to
true
).toc()
was called without
matching tic()
.
reset()
method which was not working properly in
some cases where timers spread out over multiple methods.Timer
class. They
were not working properly in the previous version.This is the initial release of rcpptimer
. It is based on
RcppClock
but contains a number of improvements:
tic
and toc
instead of
tick
and tock
to be consistent with R’s
tictoc
package