This project is old! Go to https://scratch.mit.edu/projects/1076755913/ if you want a better decimal clock experience. Or just look up "decimal time" or "decimal clock" or "10 hour clock" and click on a project made by someone else. *-. This project has only 1 sprite and 1 variable, so you can easily pack it into one of your projects. .-* The hands are similar to a regular analogue clock: The thick but short hand is the decimal hour, the thinner but longer hand represents the decimal minute, and the red hand represents the decimal second.
- You are allowed to comment about your own clock projects on here! - I made this 4 days before another person did, although I am not the first. Still cool. I decided to make this for fun. I find it interesting to have a 10/100/100 (decimal time) system rather than 24/60/60 (standard time), although divisors are a problem with the 10/100/100 system. Try dividing the day into 3 perfectly equal parts using it. You can't do it, can you? (Unless you used an infinite amount of digits for the subdivision of decimal seconds.) Now, try doing the same thing with the 24/60/60 system. It's simple. You don't even have to go into the minutes or seconds. It's just 8 hours, 24/3=8.