No, it's not. Use the Stopwatch (in System.Diagnostics
)
Stopwatch sw = Stopwatch.StartNew();
PerformWork();
sw.Stop();
Console.WriteLine("Time taken: {0}ms", sw.Elapsed.TotalMilliseconds);
Stopwatch automatically checks for the existence of high-precision timers.
It is worth mentioning that DateTime.Now
often is quite a bit slower than DateTime.UtcNow
due to the work that has to be done with timezones, DST and such.
DateTime.UtcNow typically has a resolution of 15 ms. See John Chapman's blog post about DateTime.Now
precision for a great summary.
Interesting trivia: The stopwatch falls back on DateTime.UtcNow
if your hardware doesn't support a high frequency counter. You can check to see if Stopwatch uses hardware to achieve high precision by looking at the static field Stopwatch.IsHighResolution.
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