Thread.sleep
causes the current thread to suspend execution for a specified period. This is an efficient means of making processor time available to the other threads of an application or other applications that might be running on a computer system. Thesleep
method can also be used for pacing, as shown in the example that follows, and waiting for another thread with duties that are understood to have time requirements, as with theSimpleThreads
example in a later section.Two overloaded versions of
sleep
are provided: one that specifies the sleep time to the millisecond and one that specifies the sleep time to the nanosecond. However, these sleep times are not guaranteed to be precise, because they are limited by the facilities provided by the underlying OS. Also, the sleep period can be terminated by interrupts, as we'll see in a later section. In any case, you cannot assume that invokingsleep
will suspend the thread for precisely the time period specified.The
example uses
SleepMessages
sleep
to print messages at four-second intervals:Notice thatpublic class SleepMessages { public static void main(String args[]) throws InterruptedException { String importantInfo[] = { "Mares eat oats", "Does eat oats", "Little lambs eat ivy", "A kid will eat ivy too" }; for (int i = 0; i < importantInfo.length; i++) { //Pause for 4 seconds Thread.sleep(4000); //Print a message System.out.println(importantInfo[i]); } } }main
declares that itthrows InterruptedException
. This is an exception thatsleep
throws when another thread interrupts the current thread whilesleep
is active. Since this application has not defined another thread to cause the interrupt, it doesn't bother to catchInterruptedException
.