A proc macro and a macro attribute to quickly time functions. Uses std::time::Instant so relies on std to work.

#[time_this]

This macro can be used to time any function you want using std::time::Instant. Whenever the function gets called, its timing information will be passed to stdout. It may not work correctly with async fn and it definitely doesn't work with const fn, even if called in a non-const context. If needed, you can write a small wrapping function if you need to time a const fn. It will print: * the time in ns if the function took less than 1μs. * the time in μs if the function took less than 1ms. * the time in ms if the function took longer than 1ms, but less than 1s. * the time in s if the function took more than a second, with two decimal digits.

```rust use timethis::timethis;

[time_this]

fn add(a: u32, b: u32) -> u32 { a + b }

fn main() { let result = add(3, 5); // function 'add()' took 37ns } ```

time!()

This macro can be used to time any expression you want using std::time::Instant. After the expression evaluates, timing information will immediately be passed to stdout.It returns the result of the expression, similar to dbg!(). It may not work correctly with async fn. Instead of printing the function name, it will print the file/line the expression that was timed at.

```rust use time_this::time;

fn add(a: u32, b: u32) -> u32 { a + b }

fn main() { let result = time!(add(3, 5)); // expression at [tests/tests.rs:33] took 28ns } ```