Timer.Enabled Propriedade

Definição

Obtém ou define um valor que indica se o Timer deve acionar o evento Elapsed.

public:
 property bool Enabled { bool get(); void set(bool value); };
public bool Enabled { get; set; }
[System.Timers.TimersDescription("TimerEnabled")]
public bool Enabled { get; set; }
member this.Enabled : bool with get, set
[<System.Timers.TimersDescription("TimerEnabled")>]
member this.Enabled : bool with get, set
Public Property Enabled As Boolean

Valor da propriedade

true caso o Timer deva acionar o evento Elapsed; caso contrário, false. O padrão é false.

Atributos

Exceções

Essa propriedade não pode ser definida porque o temporizador foi descartado.

A Interval propriedade foi definida como um valor maior que Int32.MaxValue antes de o temporizador ser habilitado.

Exemplos

O exemplo a seguir cria uma instância de um Timer objeto que dispara seu Timer.Elapsed evento a cada dois segundos (2000 milissegundos), configura um manipulador de eventos para o evento e inicia o temporizador. O manipulador de eventos exibe o valor da ElapsedEventArgs.SignalTime propriedade sempre que ela é gerada.

using namespace System;
using namespace System::Timers;

public ref class Example
{
private:
    static System::Timers::Timer^ aTimer;

public:
    static void Demo()
    {
        // Create a timer and set a two second interval.
        aTimer = gcnew System::Timers::Timer();
        aTimer->Interval = 2000;

        // Hook up the Elapsed event for the timer. 
        aTimer->Elapsed += gcnew System::Timers::ElapsedEventHandler(Example::OnTimedEvent);

        // Have the timer fire repeated events (true is the default)
        aTimer->AutoReset = true;

        // Start the timer
        aTimer->Enabled = true;

        Console::WriteLine("Press the Enter key to exit the program at any time... ");
        Console::ReadLine();
    }

private:
    static void OnTimedEvent(Object^ source, System::Timers::ElapsedEventArgs^ e)
    {
        Console::WriteLine("The Elapsed event was raised at {0}", e->SignalTime);
    }
};

int main()
{
    Example::Demo();
}
// The example displays output like the following: 
//       Press the Enter key to exit the program at any time... 
//       The Elapsed event was raised at 5/20/2015 8:48:58 PM 
//       The Elapsed event was raised at 5/20/2015 8:49:00 PM 
//       The Elapsed event was raised at 5/20/2015 8:49:02 PM 
//       The Elapsed event was raised at 5/20/2015 8:49:04 PM 
//       The Elapsed event was raised at 5/20/2015 8:49:06 PM
using System;
using System.Timers;

public class Example
{
    private static Timer aTimer;

    public static void Main()
    {
        // Create a timer and set a two second interval.
        aTimer = new System.Timers.Timer();
        aTimer.Interval = 2000;

        // Hook up the Elapsed event for the timer. 
        aTimer.Elapsed += OnTimedEvent;

        // Have the timer fire repeated events (true is the default)
        aTimer.AutoReset = true;

        // Start the timer
        aTimer.Enabled = true;

        Console.WriteLine("Press the Enter key to exit the program at any time... ");
        Console.ReadLine();
    }

    private static void OnTimedEvent(Object source, System.Timers.ElapsedEventArgs e)
    {
        Console.WriteLine("The Elapsed event was raised at {0}", e.SignalTime);
    }
}
// The example displays output like the following: 
//       Press the Enter key to exit the program at any time... 
//       The Elapsed event was raised at 5/20/2015 8:48:58 PM 
//       The Elapsed event was raised at 5/20/2015 8:49:00 PM 
//       The Elapsed event was raised at 5/20/2015 8:49:02 PM 
//       The Elapsed event was raised at 5/20/2015 8:49:04 PM 
//       The Elapsed event was raised at 5/20/2015 8:49:06 PM
open System.Timers

let onTimedEvent source (e: ElapsedEventArgs) =
    printfn $"The Elapsed event was raised at {e.SignalTime}"

// Create a timer and set a two second interval.
let aTimer = new Timer()
aTimer.Interval <- 2000

// Hook up the Elapsed event for the timer. 
aTimer.Elapsed.AddHandler onTimedEvent

// Have the timer fire repeated events (true is the default)
aTimer.AutoReset <- true

// Start the timer
aTimer.Enabled <- true

printfn "Press the Enter key to exit the program at any time... "
stdin.ReadLine() |> ignore

// The example displays output like the following: 
//       Press the Enter key to exit the program at any time... 
//       The Elapsed event was raised at 5/20/2015 8:48:58 PM 
//       The Elapsed event was raised at 5/20/2015 8:49:00 PM 
//       The Elapsed event was raised at 5/20/2015 8:49:02 PM 
//       The Elapsed event was raised at 5/20/2015 8:49:04 PM 
//       The Elapsed event was raised at 5/20/2015 8:49:06 PM
Imports System.Timers

Public Module Example
    Private aTimer As Timer

    Public Sub Main()
        ' Create a timer and set a two second interval.
        aTimer = New System.Timers.Timer()
        aTimer.Interval = 2000

        ' Hook up the Elapsed event for the timer.  
        AddHandler aTimer.Elapsed, AddressOf OnTimedEvent

        ' Have the timer fire repeated events (true is the default)
        aTimer.AutoReset = True

        ' Start the timer
        aTimer.Enabled = True

        Console.WriteLine("Press the Enter key to exit the program at any time... ")
        Console.ReadLine()
    End Sub

    Private Sub OnTimedEvent(source As Object, e As System.Timers.ElapsedEventArgs)
        Console.WriteLine("The Elapsed event was raised at {0}", e.SignalTime)
    End Sub
End Module
' The example displays output like the following: 
'       Press the Enter key to exit the program at any time... 
'       The Elapsed event was raised at 5/20/2015 8:48:58 PM 
'       The Elapsed event was raised at 5/20/2015 8:49:00 PM 
'       The Elapsed event was raised at 5/20/2015 8:49:02 PM 
'       The Elapsed event was raised at 5/20/2015 8:49:04 PM 
'       The Elapsed event was raised at 5/20/2015 8:49:06 PM

Comentários

Definir Enabled como true é o mesmo que chamar Start, enquanto definir Enabledfalse como é o mesmo que chamar Stop.

Observação

O sinal para acionar o Elapsed evento é sempre enfileirado para execução em um ThreadPool thread. Isso pode fazer com que o Elapsed evento seja gerado depois que a Enabled propriedade for definida falsecomo . O exemplo de código para o Stop método mostra uma maneira de contornar essa condição de corrida.

Se Enabled for definido true como e AutoReset for definido falsecomo , o Timer aciona o Elapsed evento apenas uma vez, a primeira vez que o intervalo passa.

Se o intervalo for definido após o Timer iniciado, a contagem será redefinida. Por exemplo, se você definir o intervalo como 5 segundos e, em seguida, definir a Enabled propriedade como true, a contagem será iniciada no momento Enabled em que for definida. Se você redefinir o intervalo para 10 segundos quando a contagem for de 3 segundos, o Elapsed evento será gerado pela primeira vez 13 segundos depois Enabled de ter sido definido truecomo .

Observação

Alguns designers visuais, como os do Microsoft Visual Studio, definem a Enabled propriedade como true ao inserir um novo Timer.

Aplica-se a

Confira também