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Date:      Thu, 20 Apr 2017 14:54:33 +0200
From:      Andreas Perstinger <andipersti@gmail.com>
To:        freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: awk help
Message-ID:  <dbda6995-0bd1-00db-63d5-80b91622212f@gmail.com>
In-Reply-To: <58F77BFE.50108@gmail.com>
References:  <58F25A01.1060208@gmail.com> <7951DF71-5CD3-4B53-9CB4-13CAA8945983@huiekin.org> <58F4CD14.7090008@gmail.com> <c95e03d2-986d-3c3c-198a-a28ab862dc70@gmail.com> <58F53EEA.2030206@gmail.com> <7b381f8f-e2a5-26ea-075e-96ae35efb25d@rogers.com> <58F61027.3090100@gmail.com> <aed3ad4b-7013-471f-8b11-bc717230cff0@gmail.com> <b7c0da1d-e659-1430-9530-37993f9182b3@gmail.com> <58F77BFE.50108@gmail.com>

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On 2017-04-19 17:02, Ernie Luzar wrote:
> I used the date command to time the runs, problem is it only goes to a
> second. What is really needed here is a timer in hundredths of a second.
> Is there such a command that does that?

There is the "time" command for timing the execution of a command/script.

Bye, Andreas



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