sleep: Difference between revisions
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| [[ | | [[uiSleep]], [[waitUntil]], [[canSuspend]], [[execVM]], [[spawn]], [[sleep vs uiSleep]], [[Control Structures]] |= See also | ||
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Revision as of 17:49, 14 March 2016
Description
- Description:
- Suspend execution for given time in seconds. The sleep precision is given by a framerate, the delay given is the minimal delay expected. Must be called inside of a context which is interruptible, i.e. a script executed by execVM or spawn.
Note that this command will suspend the script indefinitely if game simulation is paused in SP. To avoid this, use uiSleep. - Groups:
- Uncategorised
Syntax
Examples
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 December 20, 2006 - 19:53
- CrashDome
- Sleep 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 February 12, 2007 - 20:16
- Kronzky
- Sleep durations between .0005 and .02 will cause the same delay (roughly .02 seconds).
Delays of .0005 and less have no effect (ie, the sleep call will return immediately). - Sbsmac
- The comment above is a little misleading. The game engine appears to work by processing frames and then checking to see whether scripts are available to execute. Sleep causes the script/function to be suspended until at least the specified time has elapsed. To wait for the next frame, or give other scripts a chance to run, use Sleep 0.001.
- Posted on July 16, 2007 - 00:13
- Inkompetent
- For scripts called by the Init Event Handler the first sleep command will suspend the script at the briefing screen at the start of a mission. The script will continue after the briefing screen, when actually "in game".
Bottom Section
- Posted on July 12, 2014 - 13:41 (UTC)
- SilentSpike
- Sleep will treat negative values as if they were 0. (Tested in Arma 3 v1.22)
- Posted on October 18, 2014 - 21:24 (UTC)
- AgentRevolution
- For server scripts, if you are creating "while true" timers, it is best to use uiSleep instead, as the sleep from that command is not slowed down by simulation / server lag, so the timers will execute at intervals that are much closer to real time, even under heavy lag.