http://developer.android.com/reference/android/os/CountDownTimer.html
TextView _tv = (TextView) findViewById( R.id.textView1 );
new CountDownTimer(30000, 1000) { // adjust the milli seconds here
public void onTick(long millisUntilFinished) {
_tv.setText(""+String.format("%d min, %d sec",
TimeUnit.MILLISECONDS.toMinutes( millisUntilFinished),
TimeUnit.MILLISECONDS.toSeconds(millisUntilFinished) -
TimeUnit.MINUTES.toSeconds(TimeUnit.MILLISECONDS.toMinutes(millisUntilFinished))));
}
public void onFinish() {
_tv.setText("done!");
}
}.start();
Since java 1.5 there is the java.util.concurrent.TimeUnit class
_tv.setText(""+String.format("%d min, %d sec",
TimeUnit.MILLISECONDS.toMinutes( millisUntilFinished),
TimeUnit.MILLISECONDS.toSeconds(millisUntilFinished) -
TimeUnit.MINUTES.toSeconds(TimeUnit.MILLISECONDS.toMinutes(millisUntilFinished))));
http://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/util/concurrent/TimeUnit.html
A TimeUnit represents time durations at a given unit of granularity and provides utility methods to convert across units, and to perform timing and delay operations in these units.
For Java versions below 1.5 or for systems that do not fully support the TimeUnit class the following equations can be used:
int seconds = (int) (milliseconds / 1000) % 60 ;
int minutes = (int) ((milliseconds / (1000*60)) % 60);
int hours = (int) ((milliseconds / (1000*60*60)) % 24);
To vibrate
Vibrator v = (Vibrator) getSystemService(Context.VIBRATOR_SERVICE);
// Vibrate for 500 milliseconds
v.vibrate(500);
<uses-permission android:name="android.permission.VIBRATE"/> // permission in manifest
Edit:
Vibrate at 4 min 55 seconds for 500 milli seconds
if((TimeUnit.MILLISECONDS.toMinutes( millisUntilFinished)==4) &&
TimeUnit.MILLISECONDS.toSeconds(millisUntilFinished) -
TimeUnit.MINUTES.toSeconds(TimeUnit.MILLISECONDS.toMinutes(millisUntilFinished))==55)
{
Vibrator v = (Vibrator) getSystemService(Context.VIBRATOR_SERVICE);
// Vibrate for 500 milliseconds
v.vibrate(500);
}
与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…