Question

How do I sleep for shorter than a second in Perl?

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Solution

From the Perldoc page on sleep:

For delays of finer granularity than one second, the Time::HiRes module (from CPAN, and starting from Perl 5.8 part of the standard distribution) provides usleep().

Actually, it provides usleep() (which sleeps in microseconds) and nanosleep() (which sleeps in nanoseconds). You may want usleep(), which should let you deal with easier numbers. 1 millisecond sleep (using each):

use strict;
use warnings;

use Time::HiRes qw(usleep nanosleep);

# 1 millisecond == 1000 microseconds
usleep(1000);
# 1 microsecond == 1000 nanoseconds
nanosleep(1000000);

If you don't want to (or can't) load a module to do this, you may also be able to use the built-in select() function:

# Sleep for 250 milliseconds
select(undef, undef, undef, 0.25);

OTHER TIPS

Time::HiRes:

  use Time::HiRes;
  Time::HiRes::sleep(0.1); #.1 seconds
  Time::HiRes::usleep(1); # 1 microsecond.

http://perldoc.perl.org/Time/HiRes.html

From perlfaq8:


How can I sleep() or alarm() for under a second?

If you want finer granularity than the 1 second that the sleep() function provides, the easiest way is to use the select() function as documented in select in perlfunc. Try the Time::HiRes and the BSD::Itimer modules (available from CPAN, and starting from Perl 5.8 Time::HiRes is part of the standard distribution).

A quick googling on "perl high resolution timers" gave a reference to Time::HiRes. Maybe that it what you want.

system "sleep 0.1";

does the trick.

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