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MultiClock
MultiClock is a screensaver for macOS that displays the current time using 24 clocks. MultiClock is very configurable, with a variety of hand and dial styles and the ability to customize the color of each independently.
Preview
Note: This gif has a low framerate. The screensaver itself operates at a fluid 60 FPS.
Download
FAQ
What about 24-hour time support?
If you have macOS set to 24-hour time, the screensaver will automatically use 24-hour time as well.
Development
- Clone the repo
- Open
MultiClock.xcodeproj
- The 'macOS' build target allows you to preview the screensaver and control it manually. Take a look at the bottom of
ClockScene.swift
to see some keyboard shortcuts. Add your own to test out animations!
Adding Animations
If you'd like to add animations to ClockSaver, the public methods on the Animation
class make it easy--they're very similar to SKActions. For example, a sequence of animations may look like this:
queue(animations: [
Animation.display(pattern: inwardPointPattern),
Animation.wait(duration: 5),
Animation.positionBothHands(minuteDegrees: -45, hourDegrees: -225),
Animation.spinBothHandsWithDelay(by: 180, delay: 0.2),
Animation.currentTimeClock(),
Animation.wait(duration: 5),
Animation.positionBothHands(minuteDegrees: -225, hourDegrees: -225),
Animation.positionBothHands(minuteDegrees: 0, hourDegrees: 0),
Animation.currentTimePrint(),
])
Completed animations should go in ClockController.swift
. Add another integer to allAnimations
at the top, and add a new case
to the switch
down below. Then submit a PR if you think the animation is cool :)
Why are all the degree references in negative? Because I'm too lazy to go back and make them positive after reworking the animation system. Submit a PR fixing it, if you want!
Authors
- Brad Root - amiantos
Credits
MultiClock was inspired by ClockClock 24 by Humans since 1982.