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Home/ Questions/Q 8415971
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 10, 20262026-06-10T01:36:18+00:00 2026-06-10T01:36:18+00:00

I’m working with an app that processes device motion events and updates interface in

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I’m working with an app that processes device motion events and updates interface in 5 second increments. I would like to add an indicator to the app that would display the total time the app has been running. It seems that a stopwatch-like counter, like the native iOS Clock app is a reasonable way to count time that the app has been running and display it to the user.

What I’m not sure of is the technical implementation of such a stopwatch. Here’s what I’m thinking:

  • if I know how long between interface updates, I can add up seconds between events and keep a count of seconds as a local variable. Alternatively, a 0.5 second interval scheduled timer can provide the count.

  • If I know the start date of the app, I can convert the local variable to date for each interface update using [[NSDate dateWithTimeInterval:(NSTimeInterval) sinceDate:(NSDate *)]

  • I can use a NSDateFormatter with a short time style to convert the updated date to a string using stringFromDate method

  • The resulting string can be assigned to a label in the interface.

  • The result is that the stopwatch is updated for each “tick” of the app.

It appears to me that this implementation is a bit too heavy and is not quite as fluid as the stopwatch app. Is there a better, more interactive way to count up time that the app has been running? Maybe there’s something already provided by iOS for this purpose?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-10T01:36:19+00:00Added an answer on June 10, 2026 at 1:36 am

    Almost what @terry lewis suggested but with an algorithm tweak:

    1) schedule a timer

    NSTimer *timer = [NSTimer scheduledTimerWithTimeInterval:1.0 target:self selector:@selector(timerTick:) userInfo:nil repeats:YES];
    

    2) when the timer fires, get the current time (that’s the tweak, don’t count ticks because if there is wobble in the timer, tick counting will accumulate the error), then update the UI. Also, NSDateFormatter is a simpler and more versatile way to format time for display.

    - (void)timerTick:(NSTimer *)timer {
        NSDate *now = [NSDate date];
    
        static NSDateFormatter *dateFormatter;
        if (!dateFormatter) {
            dateFormatter = [[NSDateFormatter alloc] init];
            dateFormatter.dateFormat = @"h:mm:ss a";  // very simple format  "8:47:22 AM"
        }
        self.myTimerLabel.text = [dateFormatter stringFromDate:now];
    }
    
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