I tried the new Record type TTimeSpan in Delphi 2010. But I encourage a very strange problem.
assert(TTimeSpan.FromMilliseconds(5000).Milliseconds = 5000);
This assertion does not pass. The value of 'TTimeSpan.FromMillisecon开发者_高级运维ds(5000).Milliseconds' is expected to be 5000, but it was 0.
I dig deeper:
function TTimeSpan.GetMilliseconds: Integer;
begin
Result := Integer((FTicks div TicksPerMillisecond) mod 1000);
end;
FTicks = 50000000
TicksPerMillisecond = 10000
FTick div TicksPerMillisecond = 50000000 div 10000 = 5000
(FTick div TicksPerMillisecond) mod 1000 = 5000 mod 1000 = 0 // I do not understand, why mod 1000
Integer((FTick div TicksPerMillisecond) mod 1000) = Integer(0) = 0
My code interpretation is correct, isn't it?
UPDATE: The method GetTotalMilliseconds (double precision) is implemented correctly.
You are confusing the properties giving the total amount expressed in a given unit with the properties giving the portion of a value when you break it up into its components (days, hours, minutes, seconds, milliseconds, ticks).
With those, you get the integer remainder for each category. So, Milliseconds
will always be between 0 and 999 (Number Of Milliseconds Per Second - 1).
Or, another example, if you have 72 minutes, TotalMinutes
is 72, but Minutes
is 12.
It is very much similar to the DecodeDateTime
function to break up a TDateTime
.
And for what you want to achieve, you definitely need to use the TotalMilliseconds
property, as TridenT pointed out, but the code for GetMilliseconds
is indeed correct in TimeSpan
.
You must use TotalMilliseconds
instead of Milliseconds
property.
It works better !
assert(TTimeSpan.FromMilliseconds(5000).TotalMilliseconds = 5000);
From documentation:
TotalMilliseconds Double
Timespan expressed as milliseconds and part milliseconds
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