In Windows' time.clock(), when QueryPerformanceFrequency() fails,
the C lib's clock() is used, but it must be divided by CLOCKS_PER_SEC
as for the POSIX implementation (thanks to #pypy).
diff --git a/Modules/timemodule.c b/Modules/timemodule.c
index 9ab2724..4f562c7 100644
--- a/Modules/timemodule.c
+++ b/Modules/timemodule.c
@@ -175,7 +175,8 @@
if (!QueryPerformanceFrequency(&freq) || freq.QuadPart == 0) {
/* Unlikely to happen - this works on all intel
machines at least! Revert to clock() */
- return PyFloat_FromDouble(clock());
+ return PyFloat_FromDouble(((double)clock()) /
+ CLOCKS_PER_SEC);
}
divisor = (double)freq.QuadPart;
}