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title | date | draft | tags | medium_enabled | |
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Python: Set Interval | 2020-02-25T21:34:03-05:00 | false |
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true |
Javascript has a function called setInterval
which given a length of time T
and a callback function, it will perform that function every T
milliseconds. For example, to print "Hello, World!" every 5 seconds:
setInterval(function() {
console.log("Hello, World!")
}, 5 * 1000)
Wouldn't it be nice if Python had a similar functionality? Well thanks to right2clicky, there's a nice and quick way to implement one.
from threading import Timer
class Repeat(Timer):
def run(self):
while not self.finished.wait(self.interval):
self.function(*self.args, **self.kwargs)
Since self.finished.wait
only returns True
when the Event self.finished
is set to true, the thread will keep waiting and calling the function for the set interval time period.
The same post has a usage example:
from time import sleep
t = Repeat(1.0, lambda: print("Hello, World!"))
t.start()
sleep(5)
t.cancel()