Set the hour, minute, and second for the online countdown timer, and start it. Alternatively, you can set the date and time to count days, hours, minutes, and seconds till (or from) the event. The timer triggered alert will appear, and the pre-selected sound will be played at the set time.
I'm trying to create a workout countdown timer of 30 seconds workout and 10 seconds rest.
After the 30 seconds run out, I would like to add a sound and once the sound stopped, start the 10 seconds rest countdown timer.
I managed to get the countdown timer to work, however can't seem to be able to get to the second stage of adding the sound then start the countdown rest timer of 10 seconds.
Can anyone help please?
Many thanks
Many thanks for this.
One thing I was looking for and this didn't cover was the countdown timer to actually show on the screen. So counting down from 30....
Thank you though Appreciate you using your time to help me.
Try adding some logging, and see if your onTick millisUntilFinished is being called more often than you think. It's possible that it's being called e.g. at 5 seconds and at 5.5 seconds, both of which would generate a "seconds" variable of 5. You might either want to tweak the interval you're using, or else save a boolean soundPlayed and don't play again if it's set.
- An active Internet connection required to play a sound signal. Do not close the web-browser or shut down your personal computer while using the online timer. Turn off the Power Save mode so ensure that the online timer will operate correctly.
- I am not sure if other users are experiencing the same issue but I find that the seconds countdown is just a little slow. Definitely not like in the youtube video link in the op. Would it be possible to also adjust the speed of the countdown? I thought that maybe my vessel was too big and had too many parts which might have slowed down the countdown. However, I experienced the same slowness with a very basic and tiny rocket.
Now here's a hypothetical question dealing with the countdown clock and Mechjeb regarding "Timed" launches" (For example in order to meet up with a space station or a luanch window. to say another planet (Say DUna For example)
Regarding the countdown, I am getting an approximate 1.5-2 second lag between the seconds on the countdown clock and since the sound/voice sequence seems to be triggered by the countdown clock it stutters the fun immersion experience.
I have actually tried it out with all the different countdowns and have encountered the approximate 1 second wait that you mentioned in the previous post. I have the sound button/toggle enabled in the settings. I also do not have any timewarp mods installed. Thanks for your help!
Please try it again with the Apollo countdown, using a handheld stopwatch. Start the stopwatch at the 35 second mark (I believe that is when the countdown starts), and at 0, record how far off it is from the actual.
Combine this with some way of playing sound in linux terminal (Play MP3 or WAV file via the Linux command line) or Cygwin (cat /path/foo.wav > /dev/dsp works for me in Babun/Windows 7) and you have a simple flexible timer with alarm!
The advantage of sleepenh is, that it is able to take into account the small delay that accumulates over time from the processing of other things than the sleep during a loop. Even if one would just sleep 1 in a loop 10 times, the overall execution would take a bit more than 10 seconds because of the small overhead that comes from executing sleep and iterating the loop. This error slowly accumulates and would over time make our stopwatch timer more and more imprecise. To fix this problem, one must each loop iteration compute the precise time to sleep which is usually slightly less than a second (for one second interval timers). The sleepenh tool does this for you.
Found this question earlier today, when looking for a term application to display a large countdown timer for a workshop. None of the suggestions was exactly what I needed, so I quickly put another one together in Go:
Shoots an image using the self-timer after a designated number of seconds have elapsed since the shutter button was pressed. Use the 5-second/10-second self-timer when you are going to be in the picture, and use the 2-second self-timer to reduce camera-shake caused by pressing the shutter button.
So my goal with this project is for the timer to countdown to and stop at zero which triggers a buzzer sound and to have a button that resets the timer back to its initial starting time and counts down again.
Below is my existing code. Currently it counts down from the starting time and once it hits zero there is a 10 second delay and it restarts counting from the starting time again on an infinite loop. Again, I want this to stop at zero and sound a buzzer and I want a button to manually restart the countdown. I can't seem to figure out how to code this. Can someone please help me out???
When I set the timer on my Clock app, the sound doesn't go off at the end of the time. I'm using iPhone 8 and have the latest software installed. The alarm works, just not the timer. Have rebooted the phone but no joy.
Lit in blue: The camera is ready for shooting. Flashing in blue: The camera is starting up. Flashing in red: An error has occurred in the camera. Lit in green: The self-timer function can be used for shooting. Flashing in green: The self-timer function is on. Unlit: Shooting is not possible as the camera is in the sleep mode, no more images can be captured, or no more recordable time remains. The lamp is also unlit in the light/sound off mode or during shooting.
In this article, we will learn how to build a 30-second countdown timer with start, stop and reset functionality. Additionally, we will learn how to trigger an alarm sound when the timer stops at the 0th count.
In order to make timer operations, we need to allow users to trigger functionalities from the screen. We accomplish that by assigning the Button DOM element with the respective JavaScript function.
The online timer is an easy-to-use computer timer you can use to display a large countdown on the screen. You can set a timer in hours, minutes, or seconds quickly and easily from any computer or mobile device. Once set, the online alarm will sound at your computer's volume.
Once set, your timer with alarm will begin counting down. On screen, you can check how long it is left and what time it finishes via the digital clock. Like a stopwatch, a progress bar will appear, showing the percentage of your countdown timer's completion. Once completed, your chosen sound will be played. Make sure your computer volume is on or turned up to hear the alarm.
You can create a timer on any computer or mobile device with an internet or Wi-Fi connection. Because the timer clock shows a large on-screen countdown, it is great for being used in classrooms or when cooking, studying, practicing for an exam, or exercising. If you'd like to start a countdown timer with a date and time, you can use the online countdown instead.
Thank you for the timer its really easy to use. But i want that if i have three speakers each having different time slots i can set their times in a series in such a way that when the other one elapses, the next one starts immediately without me having to reset for the next person.
Hi, this timer does not offer such feature, there are some apps that can do that. But otherwise this timer is really quick to set up, it takes a couple of seconds at most to set and start another time.
1) It be great to be able to change/customize the timer up message to whatever we wanted it to say.
2) I tried to hook up a speaker to my iPad to be able to amplify the bell at the end of the timer. Can barely hear it. Speaker is working with other apps.
3) It would be also be great if we can customize the bell sound to whatever we would like, to be able to choose from a list of sounds like in a smartphone, or add our own.
Hi lgor , For the minimalistic countdown timer apps on IOS , I have some question about license want to ask. If I want to install the apps to 10 x Ipad from my company which is for internal meeting support use. how many license need to purchase? as Those IPad from my company are using the same apple id ( 1 apple ID login for 10 Ipad ) , what can I do if need more than I license as apple ID can purchase the Apps 1 time only, thanks
Hi there. The timer you purchased runs as a full screen timer and was not intended to work with PowerPoint. Please check this timer: -powerpoint-timer and if interested upgrade to PRO version: -timer-pro-sale. Best
Sound of clock ticking on 60 second of length. Good for sound design, New Year's countdown, game and film cues.
This pack of sound effects includes three versions of the ticking clock (in order as shown in preview):
Stop counting numbers in your head and concentrate on the exercise. These free timer, countdown, and stopwatch apps are the virtual gym buddies you never knew you needed. Some of the best workout apps will coach you along as you exercise, but that's not always what you want.
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