14

Looking at the documentation for the millis() function , it says:

Returns the number of milliseconds since the Arduino board began running the current program. This number will overflow (go back to zero), after approximately 50 days.

How's this possible? Is Arduino detecting when millis() overflow then resets the value to 0? If so, how does it do it? I just want to know what exactly is going on under the hood with the variable that is being returned by the millis() function.

0

1 Answer 1

25

It is not an exclusive property of millis(). Any counter with a limited number of digits eventually returns to zero. For example, a 4 digit tally counter returns to zeros after 9999.

Under the hood, the variable for millis() is of type unsigned long, which is 32 bits on the Arduino. In this case, the 32 bits (binary 0's and 1's) are similar to the digits (0 thru 9) on the tally counter.

The maximum is 11111111 11111111 11111111 11111111. Once there, millis() returns to zero when you add 1. The maximum (32 "ones") is 2^32 - 1, which equals 4294967295 in the decimal number system. The maximum value for the counter is, therefore, 4,294,967,295 milliseconds. Converted to days you get approximately 49.71 days.

tally couter

1
  • 6
    Old versions of Windows also maintained a milliseconds count in a 32-bit integer, causing lots of software to misbehave after 49 days uptime. Commented Nov 26, 2018 at 2:18

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.