The window.setTimeout (and related setInterval) function in Javascript allows you to schedule a function to be executed sometime in the future:
id = setTimeout(function, delay);
where "delay" is the number of milliseconds into the future at which you want to have the function called. Before this time elapses, you can cancel the timer using:
clearTimeout(id);
What I want is to update the timer. I want to be able to advance or retard a timer so that the function gets called x milliseconds sooner or later than originally scheduled.
If there were a getTimeout method, you could do something like:
originally_scheduled_time = getTimeout(id);
updateTimeout(id, originally_schedule_time + new_delay); // change the time
but as far as I can tell there's nothing like getTimeout or any way to update an existing timer.
Is there a way to access the list of scheduled 开发者_高级运维alarms and modify them?
Is there a better approach?
thanks!
If you really want this sort of functionality, you're going to need to write it yourself.
You could create a wrapper for the setTimeout call, that will return an object you can use to "postpone" the timer:
function setAdvancedTimer(f, delay) {
var obj = {
firetime: delay + (+new Date()), // the extra + turns the date into an int
called: false,
canceled: false,
callback: f
};
// this function will set obj.called, and then call the function whenever
// the timeout eventually fires.
var callfunc = function() { obj.called = true; f(); };
// calling .extend(1000) will add 1000ms to the time and reset the timeout.
// also, calling .extend(-1000) will remove 1000ms, setting timer to 0ms if needed
obj.extend = function(ms) {
// break early if it already fired
if (obj.called || obj.canceled) return false;
// clear old timer, calculate new timer
clearTimeout(obj.timeout);
obj.firetime += ms;
var newDelay = obj.firetime - new Date(); // figure out new ms
if (newDelay < 0) newDelay = 0;
obj.timeout = setTimeout(callfunc, newDelay);
return obj;
};
// Cancel the timer...
obj.cancel = function() {
obj.canceled = true;
clearTimeout(obj.timeout);
};
// call the initial timer...
obj.timeout = setTimeout(callfunc, delay);
// return our object with the helper functions....
return obj;
}
var d = +new Date();
var timer = setAdvancedTimer(function() { alert('test'+ (+new Date() - d)); }, 1000);
timer.extend(1000);
// should alert about 2000ms later
I believe not. A better approach might be to write your own wrapper which stores your timers (func-ref, delay, and timestamp). That way you can pretend to update a timer by clearing it and calculate a copy with an updated delay.
Another wrapper:
function SpecialTimeout(fn, ms) {
this.ms = ms;
this.fn = fn;
this.timer = null;
this.init();
}
SpecialTimeout.prototype.init = function() {
this.cancel();
this.timer = setTimeout(this.fn, this.ms);
return this;
};
SpecialTimeout.prototype.change = function(ms) {
this.ms += ms;
this.init();
return this;
};
SpecialTimeout.prototype.cancel = function() {
if ( this.timer !== null ) {
clearTimeout(this.timer);
this.timer = null;
}
return this;
};
Usage:
var myTimer = new SpecialTimeout(function(){/*...*/}, 10000);
myTimer.change(-5000); // Retard by five seconds
myTimer.change(5000); // Extend by five seconds
myTimer.cancel(); // Cancel
myTimer.init(); // Restart
myTimer.change(1000).init(); // Chain!
It may be not exactly what you want, but take a look anyway, maybe you can use it to your benefit.
There is a great solution written by my ex-coworker that can create special handler functions that can stop and start timeouts when required. It is most widely used when you need to create a small delay for hover events. Like when you want to hide a mouseover menu not exactly at the time when a mouse leaves it, but a few milliseconds later. But if a mouse comes back, you need to cancel the timeout.
The solution is a function called getDelayedHandlers. For example you have a function that shows and hides a menu
function handleMenu(show) {
if (show) {
// This part shows the menu
} else {
// This part hides the menu
}
}
You can then create delayed handlers for it by doing so:
var handlers = handleMenu.getDelayedHandlers({
in: 200, // 'in' timeout
out: 300, // 'out' timeout
});
handlers
becomes an object that contains two handler functions that when being called cancel the other one's timeout.
var element = $('menu_element');
element.observe('mouseover', handlers.over);
element.observe('mouseout', handlers.out);
P.S. For this solution to work you need to extend the Function object with the curry
function, which is automatically done in Prototype.
One possibility can be like this:
if (this condition true)
{
setTimeout(function, 5000);
}
elseif (this condition true)
{
setTimeout(function, 10000);
}
else
{
setTimeout(function, 1000);
}
It's up to your how you construct your conditions or the logic. thanks
精彩评论