Kuidas Windows määrab, kui palju aega failiga toimingu tegemiseks tehakse?

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Kuidas Windows määrab, kui palju aega failiga toimingu tegemiseks tehakse?
Kuidas Windows määrab, kui palju aega failiga toimingu tegemiseks tehakse?

Video: Kuidas Windows määrab, kui palju aega failiga toimingu tegemiseks tehakse?

Video: Kuidas Windows määrab, kui palju aega failiga toimingu tegemiseks tehakse?
Video: Welcome to the myWorld Keynote | March 2022 - YouTube 2024, November
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Windowsis olevad "aeg jäävad" hinnangud on piisavad, et juhtida kellaajal hullumeelt, kuid kas olete kunagi mõelnud, kuidas Windows neid hetki määrab? Tänane SuperUseri Q & A postitus on mõned vastused uudishimulise, kuid pettunud, lugeja küsimusele.
Windowsis olevad "aeg jäävad" hinnangud on piisavad, et juhtida kellaajal hullumeelt, kuid kas olete kunagi mõelnud, kuidas Windows neid hetki määrab? Tänane SuperUseri Q & A postitus on mõned vastused uudishimulise, kuid pettunud, lugeja küsimusele.

Tänane küsimuste ja vastuste seanss jõuab meile viisakalt SuperUserini - Stack Exchange'i ja kogukonnapõhiste Q & A veebisaitide rühmitusse.

Windows 8.1 failide ülekandmise akna ekraanikujuline viisakalt im tõesti famecore.

Küsimus

SuperUser-lugeja "im really famecore" tahab teada, kuidas Windows määrab faili jaoks toimingu sooritamiseks kuluvat aega:

I wanted to know if there is an equation that Windows uses to determine how long it takes to perform an action with a file such as: deleting, copying, erasing, or installing.

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For example, when I delete a file and Windows says Time remaining: 18 seconds, how is it calculating this number, and what does it use to calculate it?

Kas Windows kasutab operatsiooni teostamiseks jäänud aja määramiseks spetsiaalset võrrandit või kas see lihtsalt annab parima arvatava hinnangu?

Vastus

SuperUseri kaasautorid Valmiky Arquissandas ja Richard saavad meile vastuse. Esiteks üles, Valmiky Arquissandas:

Have you noticed that it usually does not give you any estimates during the first few seconds?

That is because during the first few seconds, it just does the operation it has to do. Then, after a short amount of time, it knows how much it has already copied/deleted/etc, and how long it took. That gives you the average speed of the operation.

Then, divide the remaining bytes by the speed, and you have the time it will take to complete the operation.

This is elementary school math. If you want to travel 360 km, and at the end of the first minute you have traveled 1 km, how long will it take you to reach your destination?

Well, the speed is 1 km/minute, so that is 60 km/hour. 360 km divided by 60 km/hour gives you an estimated time of 6 hours (or 360 km / 1 km/minute = 360 minutes = 6 hours). Since you have already traveled for one minute, then the estimated time left is 5 hours and 59 minutes.

Substitute travel with copy, km with bytes, and that answers your question.

Different systems have different ways of estimating time. You can take the last minute and the estimates may vary wildly. Or you can take the full time, and if the speed actually changes permanently, your estimates may be far removed from reality. What I described is the simplest method.

Järgneb Richardi vastus:

If you are interested, this question tells you how Windows and OSX formats the time left into the progress bar once it has an idea how long it has remaining.

When shortening time expressions in progress dialogs, should they be rounded up or down?

Raymond Chen, a developer on the Windows team at Microsoft, confirms this algorithm (see Valmiky’s answer above) in a posting on his blog. He also explains why it can be wrong.

Why does the copy dialog give such horrible estimates?

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