Namespaces
Variants
Views
Actions

std::literals::chrono_literals::operator""ns

From cppreference.com
< cpp‎ | chrono
 
 
Utilities library
General utilities
Relational operators (deprecated in C++20)
 
 
 
Defined in header <chrono>
constexpr std::chrono::nanoseconds
    operator""ns( unsigned long long nsec );
(1) (since C++14)
constexpr std::chrono::duration</*unspecified*/, std::nano>
    operator""ns( long double nsec );
(2) (since C++14)

Forms a std::chrono::duration literal representing nanoseconds.

1) Integer literal, returns exactly std::chrono::nanoseconds(nsec).
2) Floating-point literal, returns a floating-point duration equivalent to std::chrono::nanoseconds.

Contents

[edit] Parameters

nsec - the number of nanoseconds

[edit] Return value

The std::chrono::duration literal.

[edit] Possible implementation

constexpr std::chrono::nanoseconds operator""ns(unsigned long long ns)
{
    return std::chrono::nanoseconds(ns);
}
constexpr std::chrono::duration<long double, std::nano> operator""ns(long double ns)
{
    return std::chrono::duration<long double, std::nano>(ns);
}

[edit] Notes

This operator is declared in the namespace std::literals::chrono_literals, where both literals and chrono_literals are inline namespaces. Access to this operator can be gained with:

  • using namespace std::literals,
  • using namespace std::chrono_literals, or
  • using namespace std::literals::chrono_literals.

In addition, within the namespace std::chrono, the directive using namespace literals::chrono_literals; is provided by the standard library, so that if a programmer uses using namespace std::chrono; to gain access to the classes in the chrono library, the corresponding literal operators become visible as well.

[edit] Example

#include <chrono>
#include <iostream>
 
int main()
{
    using namespace std::chrono_literals;
    auto d1{250ns};
    std::chrono::nanoseconds d2{1us};
    std::cout << d1 << " = " << d1.count() << " nanoseconds\n"
              << d2 << " = " << d2.count() << " nanoseconds\n";
}

Output:

250ns = 250 nanoseconds
1000ns = 1000 nanoseconds

[edit] See also

constructs new duration
(public member function of std::chrono::duration<Rep,Period>) [edit]