0.6 -orakul-otkrytie-tayny-oracle-at-delphi-mystery-revealed-2006-discovery.html. Nov 21, 2017.

Hochet

I tried the new Record type TTimeSpan in Delphi 2010. But I encourage a very strange problem. Assert(TTimeSpan.FromMilliseconds(5000).Milliseconds = 5000); This assertion does not pass. The value of 'TTimeSpan.FromMilliseconds(5000).Milliseconds' is expected to be 5000, but it was 0. I dig deeper: function TTimeSpan.GetMilliseconds: Integer; begin Result:= Integer((FTicks div TicksPerMillisecond) mod 1000); end; FTicks = 50000000 TicksPerMillisecond = 10000 FTick div TicksPerMillisecond = 50000000 div 10000 = 5000 (FTick div TicksPerMillisecond) mod 1000 = 5000 mod 1000 = 0 // I do not understand, why mod 1000 Integer((FTick div TicksPerMillisecond) mod 1000) = Integer(0) = 0 My code interpretation is correct, isn't it? UPDATE: The method GetTotalMilliseconds (double precision) is implemented correctly. You are confusing the properties giving the total amount expressed in a given unit with the properties giving the portion of a value when you break it up into its components (days, hours, minutes, seconds, milliseconds, ticks).

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Millionerom

With those, you get the integer remainder for each category. So, Milliseconds will always be between 0 and 999 (Number Of Milliseconds Per Second - 1). Or, another example, if you have 72 minutes, TotalMinutes is 72, but Minutes is 12. It is very much similar to the DecodeDateTime function to break up a TDateTime. And for what you want to achieve, you definitely need to use the TotalMilliseconds property, as TridenT pointed out, but the code for GetMilliseconds is indeed correct in TimeSpan.

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