A simple JavaScript module for generating countdown timers or clocks. Check out demo.html
for a brief demo of creating a simple clock in the browser and demo.js
for a demo of using this in Node.js.
This module is written to deal with common issues that come up with writing a clock that updates at a consistent rate. Looking at the JavaScript API, it would appear that setInterval
would be perfect for implementing a clock that updates every second.
It is not, for a very simple reason: setInterval
does not invoke the callback at anywhere near a steady rate. It is allowed to call it early, and it is allowed to call it late. An interval of 1000
may, in fact, be invoked every 950-980ms, which for a clock, leads to a clock that's about a second slow until it suddenly jumps forward a second.
This module solves that by instead using setTimeout
and re-invoking it based on how long it is to the next second. It also "rounds up" the current time, ensuring that if the clock is called a few milliseconds early, it will still display for the time it's "supposed" to. This means that each tick may be slightly late or slightly early, but it will update at close-enough to once a second.
The other issue is that timeouts in a browser (through either setInterval
or setTimeout
) may be delayed for a variety of reasons. For example, if the OS is overloaded, or the computer is suspended, the timeout may not be invoked until well after the time. By re-invoking setTimeout
based on when it was, in fact, called, this allows the clock to "skip ahead" and ignore any times it missed.
Note that if you're looking to create a clock with a smooth second hand, this is not the module you're looking for. Instead check out requestAnimationFrame
.
Very basic clock class that calls its ontick
method every second.
start()
- Starts the clock. Events do not fire untilstart()
is called.stop()
- Stops the clock. No more events will be called.ontick(now)
- Called once a second with the current time as aDate
. Note that theDate
given will be rounded to the nearest second - see above for an explanation as to why.
Clock.zeropad(number)
- Utility function to 0-pad a two-digit number, since this comes up so often. This will take numbers 0-9 and produce strings like"01"
.
An interval of time - sort of like a Date()
but for different periods of time.
Clock.Interval(millis)
- create a new interval for the given number of milliseconds
weeks
- number of weeks in the intervaldays
- number of days in the intervalhours
- number of hours in the intervalminutes
- number of minutes in the intervalseconds
- number of seconds in the intervalmillis
- number of milliseconds in the intervalisInPast
- indicates that the interval occurred in the past (over a negative number of milliseconds)
Building the source is currently done using Yarn and Grunt. This makes building the code simply:
yarn
grunt