You can set up a timer to call a function at a specified future time or after a certain length of idleness.
Emacs cannot run timers at any arbitrary point in a program; it can run them only when
Emacs could accept output from a subprocess: namely, while waiting or inside certain
primitive functions such as sit-for
or read-event
which _can_ wait. Therefore, a
timer's execution may be delayed if Emacs is busy. However, the time of execution is
very precise if Emacs is idle.
(Info-goto-node "(elisp)Timers")
include Ecaml.Value.Subtype
We expose private value
for free identity conversions when the value is nested in
some covariant type, e.g. (symbols : Symbol.t list :> Value.t list)
rather than
List.map symbols ~f:Symbol.to_value
.
include sig ... end
val sexp_of_t : t ‑> Sexplib.Sexp.t
eq t1 t2 = Value.eq (to_value t1) (to_value t2)
, i.e. eq
checks whether the
Emacs values underlying t1
and t2
are physically equal. This is different than
phys_equal t1 t2
, because we don't always wrap eq
Emacs values in phys_equal
OCaml values. I.e. phys_equal t1 t2
implies eq t1 t2
, but not the converse.
val is_scheduled : t ‑> bool
val run_after : ?repeat:Core_kernel.Time_ns.Span.t ‑> Core_kernel.Time_ns.Span.t ‑> (unit ‑> unit) ‑> t
(describe-function 'run-at-time)
(Info-goto-node "(elisp)Timers")
val run_after_i : ?repeat:Core_kernel.Time_ns.Span.t ‑> Core_kernel.Time_ns.Span.t ‑> (unit ‑> unit) ‑> unit
run_after_i s f = ignore (run_after s f)
val sit_for : ?redisplay:bool ‑> Core_kernel.Time_ns.Span.t ‑> unit
(describe-function 'sit-for)
(Info-goto-node "(elisp)Waiting")
val sleep_for : Core_kernel.Time_ns.Span.t ‑> unit
(describe-function 'sleep-for)
(Info-goto-node "(elisp)Waiting")