Milliseconds can be obtained with a shell script.
Hello, I tried it, you can display the milliseconds, but just display it in the auxiliary program, how to extract the floating text?Milliseconds can be obtained with a shell script.
Thank you, this can be displayed, but he is a fixed time displayed, can it display the real -time time? The effect of beating per secondYou can specify local variables from the red circle in the floating text dialog.
Yes, it can be displayed, but the screen will be a little stuck, but the desired effect has been achieved, thank you very much.This is a video of the operation.
time_display
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Store the Shell date command in an appropriate format (such asHello, I tried it, you can display the milliseconds, but just display it in the auxiliary program, how to extract the floating text?
date +%H:%M:%S.%3N
or date +.3N
to only get ms) in a String variable and then use/display this variable as desiredYes, you're right: it's the same command as yours but I was surprised by Yhang's question and think he didn't understand how it works.@Dm114 Is that not the case with the screenshots and macros I am presenting?
@Yhang method is not wrong, I didn't know, but if you specify the hours:minutes:seconds directly, the floating text value will move.
From this, if we have magic text for milliseconds, we should be able to display milliseconds without resorting to shell scripts.
It would be better if milliseconds were added to the built-in software, and the degree of freedom would be higher, allowing users to choose whether to display or not.@Dm114 Is that not the case with the screenshots and macros I am presenting?
@Yhang method is not wrong, I didn't know, but if you specify the hours:minutes:seconds directly, the floating text value will move.
From this, if we have magic text for milliseconds, we should be able to display milliseconds without resorting to shell scripts.
I'm not a Unix specialist but I guess it's not possible as ms are probably stored apart from date-time which is stored in seconds. ms couldn't fit if stored as an integer, nor decimal value.It would be better if milliseconds were added to the built-in software, and the degree of freedom would be higher, allowing users to choose whether to display or not.
Neither do I! I'm not sure how or when it could be usefull except to name files dynamically. As I said above, it can't be accurate in any way...It can be added, but I'd like to understand a worthwhile use case for it.