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It would be helpful if there was a way to start the timer when it is instantiated, such as t = Timer().start() or t = Timer(now=True).
t = Timer().start()
t = Timer(now=True)
This can reduce the number of required lines from 3 to 2 which is nice when inserting many timers.
t = Timer().start() # code block 1 t.stop() t = Timer().start() # code block 2 t.stop() t = Timer().start() # code block 3 t.stop()
To do this, either .start() would need to return self or a Timer.__post_init__ function would need to if self.now == True.
.start()
self
Timer.__post_init__
self.now == True
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered:
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It would be helpful if there was a way to start the timer when it is instantiated, such as
t = Timer().start()
ort = Timer(now=True)
.This can reduce the number of required lines from 3 to 2 which is nice when inserting many timers.
To do this, either
.start()
would need to returnself
or aTimer.__post_init__
function would need to ifself.now == True
.The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: