Question

How to convert System.currentTimeMillis(); to seconds?

long start6=System.currentTimeMillis();
System.out.println(counter.countPrimes(100000000)+" for "+start6);

The console shows me 5761455 for 1307816001290. I can't read how many seconds that is.

Any help?

Was it helpful?

Solution

long start = System.currentTimeMillis();
counter.countPrimes(1000000);
long end = System.currentTimeMillis();

System.out.println("Took : " + ((end - start) / 1000));

UPDATE

An even more accurate solution would be:

final long start = System.nanoTime();
counter.countPrimes(1000000);
final long end = System.nanoTime();

System.out.println("Took: " + ((end - start) / 1000000) + "ms");
System.out.println("Took: " + (end - start)/ 1000000000 + " seconds");

OTHER TIPS

TimeUnit

Use the TimeUnit enum built into Java 5 and later.

long timeMillis = System.currentTimeMillis();
long timeSeconds = TimeUnit.MILLISECONDS.toSeconds(timeMillis);

like so:

(int)(milliseconds / 1000)

From your code it would appear that you are trying to measure how long a computation took (as opposed to trying to figure out what the current time is).

In that case, you need to call currentTimeMillis before and after the computation, take the difference, and divide the result by 1000 to convert milliseconds to seconds.

Java 8 now provides the most concise method to get current Unix Timestamp:

Instant.now().getEpochSecond();

I have written the following code in my last assignment, it may help you:

// A method that converts the nano-seconds to Seconds-Minutes-Hours form
private static String formatTime(long nanoSeconds)
{
    int hours, minutes, remainder, totalSecondsNoFraction;
    double totalSeconds, seconds;


    // Calculating hours, minutes and seconds
    totalSeconds = (double) nanoSeconds / 1000000000.0;
    String s = Double.toString(totalSeconds);
    String [] arr = s.split("\\.");
    totalSecondsNoFraction = Integer.parseInt(arr[0]);
    hours = totalSecondsNoFraction / 3600;
    remainder = totalSecondsNoFraction % 3600;
    minutes = remainder / 60;
    seconds = remainder % 60;
    if(arr[1].contains("E")) seconds = Double.parseDouble("." + arr[1]);
    else seconds += Double.parseDouble("." + arr[1]);


    // Formatting the string that conatins hours, minutes and seconds
    StringBuilder result = new StringBuilder(".");
    String sep = "", nextSep = " and ";
    if(seconds > 0)
    {
        result.insert(0, " seconds").insert(0, seconds);
        sep = nextSep;
        nextSep = ", ";
    }
    if(minutes > 0)
    {
        if(minutes > 1) result.insert(0, sep).insert(0, " minutes").insert(0, minutes);
        else result.insert(0, sep).insert(0, " minute").insert(0, minutes);
        sep = nextSep;
        nextSep = ", ";
    }
    if(hours > 0)
    {
        if(hours > 1) result.insert(0, sep).insert(0, " hours").insert(0, hours);
        else result.insert(0, sep).insert(0, " hour").insert(0, hours);
    }
    return result.toString();
}

Just convert nano-seconds to milli-seconds.

TimeUnit.SECONDS.convert(start6, TimeUnit.MILLISECONDS);

For conversion of milliseconds to seconds, since 1 second = 10³ milliseconds:

//here m will be in seconds
long m = System.currentTimeMillis()/1000;

//here m will be in minutes
long m = System.currentTimeMillis()/1000/60; //this will give in mins
// Convert millis to seconds. This can be simplified a bit,
// but I left it in this form for clarity.
long m = System.currentTimeMillis(); // that's our input
int s = Math.max(.18*(Math.toRadians(m)/Math.PI),Math.pow(Math.E, Math.log(m)-Math.log(1000)));
System.out.println( "seconds: "+s );
Licensed under: CC-BY-SA with attribution
Not affiliated with StackOverflow
scroll top