![]() Update 11: Time = 09.900, Skin = 09.000 (synchronized, but duplicate of skin time above) Update 01: Time = 00.900, Skin = 00.000 (synchronized, but duplicate of skin time above) The hour and minute are not relevant in this, so we'll only show the seconds.milliseconds part (as in 03.999) - Time means the real time, Skin means the time shown in the skin (actually, just the seconds, assuming a HH:MM:SS format) based on the update rate and delay: the skin update that happens on refreshing the skin), the computer time and the Rainmeter skin are "synchronized". Let's also assume that at update 00 below (i.e. For computational sake, but also to show what happens if the delay is near 0 when the system is idle, let's also suppose that the delay of Rainmeter is constant and has a value of 0 ms (none of those assumptions are true in a dynamic computer environment, of course, but it just makes illustrating the outcome easier, without affecting the conclusion you can have a different delay or a variable / dynamic delay as it actually happens, the only thing below that will be different will be the numbers, as the conclusion will remain the same, especially on significant delay variations). To illustrate what happens, let's suppose we set a 900 ms update in the skin to try to be precise and eliminate the delays. Yeah, the thing is that no matter how one approaches this, there are going to be those "delays" that one cannot estimate precisely, and one just cannot do a perfectly accurate time skin in Rainmeter, simple because of how Rainmeter operates in the first place. ![]() I have not asked if this is wrong before so - I may be after all. There is some delay between rainmeter and windows, the Time function is based on windows time, so shortening the delay will have no effect other than reducing if not eliminating any delays. I might sound like a 'rule breaker', but for clock skins, I have found Update=900 to be most effective in the clock keeping up with the windows clock. After you are done save the code file.Mor3bane wrote: ↑ July 1st, 2020, 7:02 am Search for there you will find skin settings with respective Instructions. In order to change properties like Scale, Color of the clock, right click on the skin currently loaded, click on Edit it will open up the skin code. Use this website to find coordinates Skin Settings ![]() Just change your coordinates by little bit it should fix the issue. How to fix the error in which weather info shows as "feels_like" Other weather settings will be present in that file itself read the instructions provided and change them accordingly. After you get your API key go to Documents > Rainmeter > SimpleClock 2.0 > Resources there you will find a file called variables.inc open it, paste the API key. Your API key will take atleast 5 to 10 minutes to get activated so you might as well wait before using it in the skin. First of all, create a free OpenWeatherMap account get your API key from profile page of your account. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |