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DurationHelper Class

Definition

Provides basic utility methods for processing Duration values. C# and Microsoft Visual Basic code should use methods of Duration instead.

public ref class DurationHelper sealed
/// [Windows.Foundation.Metadata.ContractVersion(Windows.Foundation.UniversalApiContract, 65536)]
/// [Windows.Foundation.Metadata.MarshalingBehavior(Windows.Foundation.Metadata.MarshalingType.Agile)]
/// [Windows.Foundation.Metadata.Threading(Windows.Foundation.Metadata.ThreadingModel.Both)]
class DurationHelper final
[Windows.Foundation.Metadata.ContractVersion(typeof(Windows.Foundation.UniversalApiContract), 65536)]
[Windows.Foundation.Metadata.MarshalingBehavior(Windows.Foundation.Metadata.MarshalingType.Agile)]
[Windows.Foundation.Metadata.Threading(Windows.Foundation.Metadata.ThreadingModel.Both)]
public sealed class DurationHelper
Public NotInheritable Class DurationHelper
Inheritance
Object Platform::Object IInspectable DurationHelper
Attributes

Windows requirements

Device family
Windows 10 (introduced in 10.0.10240.0)
API contract
Windows.Foundation.UniversalApiContract (introduced in v1.0)

Remarks

Duration is a Windows Runtime structure that represents a unit of time for an animation behavior. For example, Timeline.Duration uses a Duration value.

DurationHelper is one of several Helper classes that are intended to provide utility methods for Windows Runtime structure values. C# and Microsoft Visual Basic code can use members of Duration instead, because utility members are available directly on the structure due to .NET Framework runtime support. C++ code can only access the Timespan data value on Duration. For C++ developers, approximately the same utility features that a Microsoft Visual Basic developer could use directly on Duration are available in a static form on the DurationHelper class.

Properties

Automatic

Returns a generated Duration value that indicates an "Automatic" Duration. C# and Microsoft Visual Basic code should use Duration.Automatic instead.

Forever

Returns a generated Duration value that indicates a "Forever" Duration. C# and Microsoft Visual Basic code should use Duration.Forever instead.

Methods

Add(Duration, Duration)

Adds the TimeSpan component of two Duration values. C# and Microsoft Visual Basic code should use the Addition (+) operator or the Duration.Add method instead.

Compare(Duration, Duration)

Compares value equality of two Duration structures. C# and Microsoft Visual Basic code should use Duration.Compare instead.

Equals(Duration, Duration)

Determines whether two Duration values have equivalent values. C# and Microsoft Visual Basic code should use the Equality (=) operator or Duration.Equals method instead.

FromTimeSpan(TimeSpan)

Creates a new Duration based on a TimeSpan value. C# and Microsoft Visual Basic code should use the Duration(TimeSpan) constructor instead.

GetHasTimeSpan(Duration)

Returns whether the TimeSpan component of a given Duration holds a non-null value. C# and Microsoft Visual Basic code should use Duration.HasTimeSpan instead.

Subtract(Duration, Duration)

Subtracts the TimeSpan component of one Duration value from another Duration value. C# and Microsoft Visual Basic code should use the Subtraction (-) operator or the Duration.Subtract method instead.

Applies to

See also