In late 1997 or early 1998 Paul Erickson discoverd many different combinations of the <<>clock><<>/clock> codes which you see below. The popularity has sprung again and was recently reanswered by Jerry Hollingshead in the alt.discuss.html.advanced newsgroup which has gone by the way side. I will show various ways to display the clock codes and you'll be able to create a different display without a problem. The first code is the plain old standard code. If you look at what the other codes say you'll notice that is what is actually displayed. So with that in mind you'll be able to display your own creative clock code. If you rather have the day of the week in its abbreviated form like Wed for Wednesday then just add the word "abbreviated" in front of the word "day". All boxes can display the below codes but the old Classic LBB, little black box, can not see the codes; computers can not see any of the codes. I have heard that it isn't necessary to close with <<>/clock> the <<>clock> tag but for the sake for proper syntax I have closed all of the clocks as this page will explain.
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<<>clock><<>/clock>
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<<>clock allcaps dayofweek><<>/clock>
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<<>clock allcaps dayofweek month day year time seconds ampm><<>/clock>
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<<>clock dayofweek month day year><<>/clock>
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<<>clock allcaps dayofweek month day year time military seconds ampm><<>/clock>
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<<>clock allcaps dayofweek month day year time military seconds><<>/clock>
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<<>clock dayofweek month day year time military seconds><<>/clock>
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<<>clock time military seconds><<>/clock>
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<<>clock time seconds ampm><<>/clock>
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<<>clock time seconds><<>/clock>
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<<>clock dayofweek month day time military seconds>
<<>/clock>
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You can even use two clock codes together
<<>clock time military seconds><<>/clock><<>br>
<<>clock dayofweek month day year><<>/clock>
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Hey how about three codes
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