Windows show clock system tray




















Sign in to vote. How do I set the clock display in the System Tray to display what day of the week it is? OS: Win7 x64 Ultimate I searched this venue for the subject and came up empty. Thanks in advance. Wednesday, April 7, AM. Try the steps below: 1. Thursday, April 8, AM. Update: I discovered if I set the taskbar height to 1 unit tall, it displays time. How can I make it just show the day at 1 unit high, or time and day while 2 units high?

My clock displays as follows - is this what you want? Wednesday, April 7, PM. How do I do that? And does anyone know the difference between long date and short date? Start button Control Panel category view Clock Language and Region Region and Language Additional settings button Date tab on top Type the string that I gave earlier in the short date area I hope this will do, please let me know.

Regards Picsoe. I now have "Thursday 04 08" as date display. Thursday, April 8, PM. J In Windows 7, the seconds is designed not being displayed in the system tray clock.

Regards, Linda. Friday, April 9, AM. Regards, Linda Thanks Linda. You rock! Thursday, May 20, AM. Thursday, May 20, PM. Thanks to everyone who helped out on this one. Saturday, May 22, PM. Hi, I'm on Windows 7 using a Left positioned Taskbar. A couple things I can't figure out and hope you can shed some light on them: 1. Friday, August 20, AM. Friday, August 27, PM. I made that mistake for a long time Type in there what you want it to do.

It will take it. That system tray clock sure could use some modernization. Good luck. Sunday, August 29, AM. My problem is that I'm seeing more than I want to for Short date and not enough for Long time.

Sunday, August 29, PM. Any help on this? Thursday, September 2, PM. While there are several configuration settings available in the standard Windows 11 menus, there is no official configuration that will allow seconds to display as default in Windows In Windows 10 we added seconds to the system clock with an edit of the Windows Registry File, but Microsoft has decided to block that tweak.

Instead, we will have to resort to a third-party application to achieve what should be a standard feature. As you can see in Figure A , Windows 11 does not display seconds on the taskbar by default. In fact, unlike Windows 10 , left clicking the time on the taskbar will not show you seconds. A right-click on the time will access the configuration menu, but there is no option to display seconds there either. To change the default and display seconds in the system tray of the Windows 11 taskbar, we will have to install a third-party app called ElevenClock.

Once installed, ElevenClock will present its configuration screen Figure C. As you scroll down the list of configuration choices, you will come across a checkbox setting that says Show Seconds On The Clock.

I find ElevenClock most helpful when I run it located in the lower left-hand corner rather than the traditional lower right-hand corner Figure D. There is a way to display seconds in the Windows 10 system tray, but you will have to edit the Registry File to make it happen. We show you the necessary steps. The default setting for displaying the time on a Microsoft Windows 10 desktop is restricted to hours and minutes.

For most users, that default is perfectly acceptable, but others might like the option of displaying seconds in the desktop system tray of their taskbars. There is no optional configuration that will allow seconds to display as default in Windows Your PC is tracking seconds, of course, but there is no easy conventional way, no configuration setting, to add it to the system tray.

However, we can edit the Windows 10 Registry File to make it possible. Disclaimer: Editing the Windows Registry file is a serious undertaking. A corrupted Windows Registry file could render your computer inoperable, requiring a reinstallation of the Windows 10 operating system and potential loss of data. Back up the Windows 10 Registry file and create a valid restore point before you proceed.

To change the default and display seconds in the system tray of the Windows 10 taskbar, we will have to edit the Windows Registry File. Type "regedit" into the search box on your taskbar and select Registry Editor from the search results.



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