| commit | c2a0071362d267feeec85d25a8aec4548171f72e | [log] [tgz] |
|---|---|---|
| author | Devon Carew <devoncarew@google.com> | Mon Aug 29 11:28:37 2022 -0700 |
| committer | GitHub <noreply@github.com> | Mon Aug 29 11:28:37 2022 -0700 |
| tree | f540f3ff81fdf47a3336457330c220e2d166668d | |
| parent | 2507a228773c5e877fc9e3330080b234aad965c0 [diff] |
Update CONTRIBUTING.md
This package provides a Clock class which encapsulates the notion of the “current time” and provides easy access to points relative to the current time. Different Clocks can have a different notion of the current time, and the default top-level clock's notion can be swapped out to reliably test timing-dependent code.
For example, you can use clock in your libraries like this:
// run_with_timing.dart import 'package:clock/clock.dart'; /// Runs [callback] and prints how long it took. T runWithTiming<T>(T Function() callback) { var stopwatch = clock.stopwatch()..start(); var result = callback(); print('It took ${stopwatch.elapsed}!'); return result; }
...and then test your code using the fake_async package, which automatically overrides the current clock:
// run_with_timing_test.dart import 'run_with_timing.dart'; import 'package:fake_async/fake_async.dart'; import 'package:test/test.dart'; void main() { test('runWithTiming() prints the elapsed time', () { FakeAsync().run((async) { expect(() { runWithTiming(() { async.elapse(Duration(seconds: 10)); }); }, prints('It took 0:00:10.000000!')); }); }); }