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Home/ Questions/Q 893497
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T14:13:55+00:00 2026-05-15T14:13:55+00:00

What is the fastest timing system a C/C++ programmer can use? For example: time()

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What is the fastest timing system a C/C++ programmer can use?

For example:
time() will give the seconds since Jan 01 1970 00:00.
GetTickCount() on Windows will give the time, in milliseconds, since the system’s start-up time, but is limited to 49.7 days (after that it simply wraps back to zero).

I want to get the current time, or ticks since system/app start-up time, in milliseconds.

The biggest concern is the method’s overhead – I need the lightest one, because I’m about to call it many many times per second.

My case is that I have a worker thread, and to that worker thread I post pending jobs. Each job has an “execution time”. So, I don’t care if the time is the current “real” time or the time since the system’s uptime – it just must be linear and light.

Edit:

unsigned __int64 GetTickCountEx()
{
    static DWORD dwWraps = 0;
    static DWORD dwLast = 0;

    DWORD dwCurrent = 0;

    timeMutex.lock();

    dwCurrent = GetTickCount();
    if(dwLast > dwCurrent)
        dwWraps++;

    dwLast = dwCurrent;

    unsigned __int64 timeResult = ((unsigned __int64)0xFFFFFFFF * dwWraps) + dwCurrent;

    timeMutex.unlock();

    return timeResult;
}
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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T14:13:56+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 2:13 pm

    For timing, the current Microsoft recommendation is to use QueryPerformanceCounter & QueryPerformanceFrequency.

    This will give you better-than-millisecond timing. If the system doesn’t support a high-resolution timer, then it will default to milliseconds (the same as GetTickCount).

    Here is a short Microsoft article with examples of why you should use it 🙂

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