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Mar 9, 2019 at 17:54 comment added Jay @NicolBolas When they infer that milliseconds are unsupported because some functions state they do not support milliseconds, what is that?
Mar 8, 2019 at 5:05 comment added Nicol Bolas @Jay: "This is compelling to me." Then your question is opinion based. That is, an answer's validity is based entirely on your opinion of what counts as "compelling". I prefer bullet-proof code, where you write code so that it cannot be broken by someone who doesn't "know a secret". This is especially important when such breakage will be difficult to detect and hard to track down. But that's me and how I look at things. We don't want opinion-based questions for this exact reason: they create discussions, acrimony from those whose opinions aren't validated by others, and so forth.
Mar 8, 2019 at 4:28 comment added Jay @Nicol Bolas Did you read this link from Microsoft where they explain how to avoid the rounding? If somewhere Microsoft said "milliseconds are deprecated" they would have won long ago. This is compelling to me. link That link says the opposite to me: milliseconds are supported, but you have to know a secret..
Mar 8, 2019 at 2:29 comment added Nicol Bolas @Jay: I've never used the API or languages you're using, but I found the answer you're having issues with to be sufficiently "compelling", regardless of whether you can create code where it "appears to work". Indeed, I always find "appears to work" to be a generally poor reason for doing something unless I have no other choice. Even moreso if there are a bunch of functions that say that they don't allow it. As such, it's hard to know what would constitute a "compelling reason" for you.
Mar 8, 2019 at 0:39 comment added Jay I am absolutely sincere in trying to find if there is a compelling reason I should not use sub-second time, as it appears to work in that code. No one posted code showing when it does NOT work, only worry and speculation. And some vitriol.
Mar 8, 2019 at 0:20 comment added Alexei Levenkov @Jay if that what you wanted to ask... then yes (and it even aligns with the answer provided there). Also open-ended critique of working code is not exactly on-topic on SO and such question could be "too broad"... Side note: based on your comments it is not clear if you actually had a question or was open to possibility that doing what you wanted is not a good idea. Asking good question on SO when all you have is an answer is very hard (by design) - I'd strongly recommend to read link to self-answer guidance in my answer...
Mar 7, 2019 at 23:46 comment added Jay Maybe I should say "This Looks Like Proof to me, am I missing something?" Would that be a question (with the code)?
Mar 7, 2019 at 22:28 history answered Alexei Levenkov CC BY-SA 4.0