What I want is to start counting time somewhere in my code and then get the passed time, to measure the time it took to execute few function. I think I’m using the timeit module wrong, but the docs are just confusing for me.
import timeit
start = timeit.timeit()
print("hello")
end = timeit.timeit()
print(end - start)
3
If you just want to measure the elapsed wall-clock time between two points, you could use time.time()
:
import time
start = time.time()
print("hello")
end = time.time()
print(end - start)
This gives the execution time in seconds.
Another option since 3.3 might be to use perf_counter
or process_time
, depending on your requirements. Before 3.3 it was recommended to use time.clock
(thanks Amber). However, it is currently deprecated:
On Unix, return the current processor time as a floating point number
expressed in seconds. The precision, and in fact the very definition
of the meaning of “processor time”, depends on that of the C function
of the same name.On Windows, this function returns wall-clock seconds elapsed since the
first call to this function, as a floating point number, based on the
Win32 functionQueryPerformanceCounter()
. The resolution is typically
better than one microsecond.Deprecated since version 3.3: The behaviour of this function depends
on the platform: useperf_counter()
orprocess_time()
instead,
depending on your requirements, to have a well defined behaviour.