# monotonic-timestamp Monotonically increasing timestamp. This is NOT a accurate representation of the time. Since js only measures time as ms, if you call Date.now() twice quickly, it's possible to get two identical time stamps. `monotonic-timestamp` fixes that problem! (crudely) ## Example ``` js var timestamp = require('monotonic-timestamp') console.log(timestamp()) console.log(timestamp()) console.log(timestamp()) console.log(timestamp()) console.log(timestamp()) ``` subsequent calls to timestamp() are ALWAYS strictly ordered. ## byte optimizations My precious bytes! wasted on your timestamp! pack it into a string! ``` js timestamp().toString(36) ``` of course, if you are using a binary protocol, it will be cheaper to use the float... ##TODO syncronize network time. ## License MIT