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Add Sleep For A Duration as a go til

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jbranchaud
2016-02-05 14:31:54 -06:00
parent db8cb9310b
commit fae4df4b89
2 changed files with 27 additions and 1 deletions

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@@ -7,7 +7,7 @@ variety of languages and technologies. These are things that don't really
warrant a full blog post. These are mostly things I learn by pairing with warrant a full blog post. These are mostly things I learn by pairing with
smart people at [Hashrocket](http://hashrocket.com/). smart people at [Hashrocket](http://hashrocket.com/).
_324 TILs and counting..._ _325 TILs and counting..._
--- ---
@@ -103,6 +103,7 @@ _324 TILs and counting..._
- [Not So Random](go/not-so-random.md) - [Not So Random](go/not-so-random.md)
- [Replace The Current Process With An External Command](go/replace-the-current-process-with-an-external-command.md) - [Replace The Current Process With An External Command](go/replace-the-current-process-with-an-external-command.md)
- [Sleep For A Duration](go/sleep-for-a-duration.md)
### javascript ### javascript

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@@ -0,0 +1,25 @@
# Sleep For A Duration
Many languages allow you to sleep for a certain number of milliseconds. In
those languages, you can give `500` or `1000` to the sleep function to
sleep for half a second and a second respectively. In Go, the duration of a
call to [`time.Sleep`](https://golang.org/pkg/time/#Sleep) is in
nanoseconds. Fortunately, there are constants that make it easy to sleep in
terms of milliseconds.
For example, you can sleep for a half a second (500 milliseconds) like so:
```go
package main
import (
"time"
)
func main() {
time.Sleep(500 * time.Millisecond)
}
```
Other available time constants are `Nanosecond`, `Microsecond`, `Second`,
`Minute`, `Hour`.