waitUntil: Difference between revisions
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| | | Suspends execution of [[function]] or [[SQF_syntax|SQF]] based [[Script|script]] until given condition is satisfied. This command will loop and call the code inside <tt>{}</tt> ''mostly'' every frame (depends on complexity of condition and overall engine load) until the [[Code|code]] returns [[true]]. The execution of the rest of the script therefore will be suspended until [[waitUntil]] completes. <br><br> | ||
If the very first execution of the code returns [[true]] the command will exit immediately, therefore it will not produce any "Suspending not allowed in this context" error when used inside non-scheduled script. For all other uses it must be executed in environment that allows suspension ([[canSuspend]]), such as [[spawn]]ed or [[execVM]]ed code. |= Description | |||
This command will loop and call the code inside <tt>{}</tt> ''mostly'' every frame (depends on complexity of condition and overall engine load) until the [[Code|code]] returns [[true]]. The execution of the rest of the script therefore will be suspended until [[waitUntil]] | |||
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Revision as of 15:41, 14 February 2017
Description
- Description:
- Suspends execution of function or SQF based script until given condition is satisfied. This command will loop and call the code inside {} mostly every frame (depends on complexity of condition and overall engine load) until the code returns true. The execution of the rest of the script therefore will be suspended until waitUntil completes.
If the very first execution of the code returns true the command will exit immediately, therefore it will not produce any "Suspending not allowed in this context" error when used inside non-scheduled script. For all other uses it must be executed in environment that allows suspension (canSuspend), such as spawned or execVMed code. - Groups:
- Uncategorised
Syntax
Examples
- Example 1:
waitUntil { not alive player };
- Example 2:
_i = 0; waitUntil { _i = _i + 1; _i >= 100 };
- Example 3:
waitUntil {sleep 0.1; not alive player };
- Example 4:
- An on-the-fly custom event handler:
_myEH = ["ZoomIn"] spawn { while { true } do { waitUntil { inputAction (_this select 0) == 1; }; diag_log format ["%1 @ %2", _this select 0, diag_tickTime]; }; };
Although perhaps better to use onEachFrame, depending on the application.
Additional Information
Notes
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Report bugs on the Feedback Tracker and/or discuss them on the Arma Discord or on the Forums.
Only post proven facts here! Add Note
Notes
- Posted on September 20, 2013
- Killzone_Kid
- In case you have more complex code inside waitUntil loop, to be on the safe side always return boolean at the end of the scope:
player addEventHandler ["Fired", { _null = (_this select 6) spawn { _p = [0,0,0]; waitUntil { if (isNull _this) exitWith {true}; _p = getPos _this; false //<-- boolean at the end of the scope }; hint str _p; }; }];
- Posted on December 20, 2006 - 19:55
- CrashDome
- waitUntil suspends both SQF functions and SQF scripts. In functions, the calling script is still in suspension due to waiting for a return from the call command. The game engine will continue, however. See Function for more detail.
- Posted on April 2, 2010 - 17:10
- Roehre
- If WaitUntil uses an undefined call code, WaitUntil won't release, even when this code is separated from other conditions through or. Be warned that this won't cause an error message.
- Posted on Jan 07, 2011
- kju
- By default the cycle time for the condition check is per frame. Look at the example 3, how to set it at a lower rate yourself. Often times one does not need per frame checking. Saves a lot CPU checks; especially when the condition is complex to compute.
Bottom Section
- Posted on December 13, 2014 - 23:25 (UTC)
- Commy2
-
If you want to use waitUntil together with exitWith, remember that the loop only exits if the code block returns true.
It should look like this:waitUntil { // exit loop if the unit gets deleted if (isNull _unit) exitWith {true}; // has to return true to continue !alive _unit; };