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4d1d2f8c52
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1 year ago | |
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CHANGELOG.md | 1 year ago | |
LICENSE.md | 1 year ago | |
README.md | 1 year ago | |
main.js | 1 year ago | |
package.json | 1 year ago |
README.md
Overview
Adds support for the timers
module to browserify.
Wait, isn't it already supported in the browser?
The public methods of the timers
module are:
setTimeout(callback, delay, [arg], [...])
clearTimeout(timeoutId)
setInterval(callback, delay, [arg], [...])
clearInterval(intervalId)
and indeed, browsers support these already.
So, why does this exist?
The timers
module also includes some private methods used in other built-in
Node.js modules:
enroll(item, delay)
unenroll(item)
active(item)
These are used to efficiently support a large quantity of timers with the same timeouts by creating only a few timers under the covers.
Node.js also offers the immediate
APIs, which aren't yet available cross-browser, so we polyfill those:
setImmediate(callback, [arg], [...])
clearImmediate(immediateId)
I need lots of timers and want to use linked list timers as Node.js does.
Linked lists are efficient when you have thousands (millions?) of timers with the same delay. Take a look at timers-browserify-full in this case.