Timer
Online timer with alarm, free to use and easy to share. Split Lap Timer - Split Laps, record times.:-) Egg Timer - An Online Sand Timer. Bomb Countdown - Watch the fuse go down. Clock Countdown - It goes round and round. Chess Clock - A free online Chess Clock; Chess Timer - Clock goes UP, Timer goes Down. Online Clock - An Online Clock! Full Screen and Clear.
A facility for threads to schedule tasks for future execution in a background thread. Tasks may be scheduled for one-time execution, or for repeated execution at regular intervals.Corresponding to each Timer object is a single background thread that is used to execute all of the timer's tasks, sequentially. Timer tasks should complete quickly. If a timer task takes excessive time to complete, it 'hogs' the timer's task execution thread. This can, in turn, delay the execution of subsequent tasks, which may 'bunch up' and execute in rapid succession when (and if) the offending task finally completes.
After the last live reference to a Timer object goes away and all outstanding tasks have completed execution, the timer's task execution thread terminates gracefully (and becomes subject to garbage collection). However, this can take arbitrarily long to occur. By default, the task execution thread does not run as a daemon thread, so it is capable of keeping an application from terminating. If a caller wants to terminate a timer's task execution thread rapidly, the caller should invoke the timer's cancel method.
If the timer's task execution thread terminates unexpectedly, for example, because its stop method is invoked, any further attempt to schedule a task on the timer will result in an IllegalStateException, as if the timer's cancel method had been invoked.
This class is thread-safe: multiple threads can share a single Timer object without the need for external synchronization.
This class does not offer real-time guarantees: it schedules tasks using the Object.wait(long) method.
Timer 5 Minutes
Java 5.0 introduced the java.util.concurrent
package and one of the concurrency utilities therein is the ScheduledThreadPoolExecutor
which is a thread pool for repeatedly executing tasks at a given rate or delay. It is effectively a more versatile replacement for the Timer
/TimerTask
combination, as it allows multiple service threads, accepts various time units, and doesn't require subclassing TimerTask
(just implement Runnable
). Configuring ScheduledThreadPoolExecutor
with one thread makes it equivalent to Timer
.
Implementation note: This class scales to large numbers of concurrently scheduled tasks (thousands should present no problem). Internally, it uses a binary heap to represent its task queue, so the cost to schedule a task is O(log n), where n is the number of concurrently scheduled tasks.
Timer App
Timer Countdown
Implementation note: All constructors start a timer thread.