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-#N canvas 508 124 632 550 10;
-#X obj 0 0 doc_h;
-#X obj 3 302 doc_c;
-#X obj 0 521 doc_f;
-#X obj 3 501 doc_also;
-#X obj 3 426 doc_o 1;
-#X obj 3 342 doc_i 2;
-#X obj 14 372 doc_ii 0;
-#X obj 14 394 doc_ii 1;
-#X obj 14 456 doc_oo 0;
-#X obj 97 372 doc_m i0 bang;
-#X obj 97 394 doc_m i1 bang;
-#X obj 97 456 doc_m o0 float;
-#X text 232 372 reset timer;
-#X text 232 394 trigger output;
-#X obj 103 501 realtime;
-#X obj 11 96 tsctime;
-#X text 188 38 This is a super-high-resolution version of the [realtime]
-class that does not look at the ordinary clock of the operating system
-\, and instead uses the clock tick of the CPU itself. However \, if
-you have a variable-clock CPU \, this will give you some kind of virtual
-time.;
-#X msg 50 45 bang;
-#X msg 11 45 bang;
-#X floatatom 14 122 10 0 0 0 - - -;
-#X obj 78 100 realtime;
-#X floatatom 78 122 10 0 0 0 - - -;
-#X text 190 114 It's also possible that this has some other bugs related
-to scaling. However \, even if it gives you really weird values \,
-this object will give you very precise values in what is really the
-wrong scale.;
-#X text 192 171 if you are trying to measure real time with this \,
-you should disable any CPU energy saving that may change the CPU's
-clock speed. However \, if you want to measure CPU usage \, [tsctime]
-is the ONLY of the time-objects to allow you to measure CPU usage reliably
-while your clock speed changes.;
-#X text 192 255 in assembly language \, [tsctime] is called "RDTSC"
-\, and this is where [tsctime] got its name from.;
-#X text 232 456 value in "milliseconds" (or lousy imitation thereof...
-see intro text above.);
-#X connect 3 1 14 0;
-#X connect 9 1 12 0;
-#X connect 10 1 13 0;
-#X connect 11 1 25 0;
-#X connect 15 0 19 0;
-#X connect 17 0 15 1;
-#X connect 17 0 20 1;
-#X connect 18 0 15 0;
-#X connect 18 0 20 0;
-#X connect 20 0 21 0;