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chrono literals

(C++14) The <chrono> header defines 12 user-defined literals that represent hours, minutes, seconds, milliseconds, microseconds, and nanoseconds. Each user-defined literal has an integral and a floating-point overload. The literals are defined in the literals::chrono_literals inline namespace, which is brought into scope automatically when std::chrono is in scope.

Syntax

inline namespace literals {
  inline namespace chrono_literals {
    // return integral days
    constexpr std::chrono::day operator"" d(unsigned long long d) noexcept;

    // return integral hours
    constexpr chrono::hours operator"" h(unsigned long long Val);

    // return floating-point hours
    constexpr chrono::duration<double, ratio<3600>> operator"" h(long double Val);

    // return integral minutes
    constexpr chrono::minutes(operator"" min)(unsigned long long Val);

    // return floating-point minutes
    constexpr chrono::duration<double, ratio<60>>(operator"" min)(long double Val);

    // return integral seconds
    constexpr chrono::seconds operator"" s(unsigned long long Val);

    // return floating-point seconds
    constexpr chrono::duration<double> operator"" s(long double Val);

    // return integral milliseconds
    constexpr chrono::milliseconds operator"" ms(unsigned long long Val);

    // return floating-point milliseconds
    constexpr chrono::duration<double, milli> operator"" ms(long double Val);

    // return integral microseconds
    constexpr chrono::microseconds operator"" us(unsigned long long Val);

    // return floating-point microseconds
    inline constexpr chrono::duration<double, micro> operator"" us(long double Val);

    // return integral nanoseconds
    inline constexpr chrono::nanoseconds operator"" ns(unsigned long long Val);

    // return floating-point nanoseconds
    constexpr chrono::duration<double, nano> operator"" ns(long double Val);

    // return integral year
    constexpr chrono::year operator""y(unsigned long long y) noexcept; // C++20
  } // inline namespace chrono_literals
} // inline namespace literals

Return value

The literals that take a long long argument return a value or the corresponding type. The literals that take a floating point argument return a duration.

Example

The following examples show how to use the chrono literals.

constexpr auto day = 14d; // If the value > 255, then the stored value is unspecified. 
constexpr auto twoDays = 48h;
constexpr auto week = 24h* 7;
constexpr auto my_duration_unit = 108ms;
constexpr auto theYear = 2021y;