Making a Real-Time Clock With a Conic Gradient Face

Gradients have been a part of the CSS spectrum for quite some time now. We see a lot of radial and linear gradients in a lot of projects, but there is one type of gradient that seems to be a bit lonely: the conic gradient. We’re going to make a watch face using this type of gradient.

Working with conic gradients

What we’re making consists of a gradient with color transitions rotated around a center point and can have multiple color values. For this clock to work, we will also be using the angle value of a conic gradient which defines the rotation or starting point. The angle is defined by using a from value.

background-image: conic-gradient(from 45deg, #6e7dab, #5762d5);

What is interesting about this, is that a starting angle can have a negative value in CSS, which will come in handy later.

A simple elegant example of a conical gradient:

Building our basic clock

Let’s start by adding some HTML for the clock and the hands:

Let’s create some default styling for our clock. For this to work properly, we will update CSS variables with JavaScript later on, so let’s scope these variables inside our .clock selector. For easy tweaking, let’s add the colors of the hands as well.

.clock {
  /* general clock vars */
  --hour-hand-color: #000;
  --hour-hand-degrees: 0deg;
  --minute-hand-color: #000;
  --minute-hand-degrees: 0deg;
  --second-hand-color: hotpink;
  --second-hand-degrees: 0deg;

  position: relative;
  min-width: 320px;
  width: 25vw;
  height: 25vw;
  min-height: 320px;
  border-radius: 50%;
  margin: 0 auto;
  border: 7px solid #000;
}

/* clock hands */
.hand {
  position: absolute;
  left: 50%;
  bottom: 50%;
  height: 45%;
  width: 4px;
  margin-left: -2px;
  background: var(--second-hand-color);
  border-radius: 6px;
  transform-origin: bottom center;
  transition-timing-function: cubic-bezier(0.1, 2.7, 0.58, 1);
}
.second-hand {
  transform: rotate(var(--second-hand-degrees));
}
.hour-hand {
  height: 35%;
  border-radius: 40px;
  background-color: var(--hour-hand-color);
  transform: rotate(var(--hour-hand-degrees));
}
.minute-hand {
  height: 50%;
  background: var(--minute-hand-color);
  transform: rotate(var(--minute-hand-degrees));
}

This sets us up with the general styling we need for the clock. We’ve set transform-origin on the hands so that they properly rotate around the face of the clock. There are also a few custom properties in there to set angles on the hands that we’ll update with JavaScript to get the timing just right so that each hand maps to seconds, minutes, and hours accordingly.

Here’s what we have so far:

Alright, let’s move on to updating those custom properties!

Adding the JavaScript for our basic clock

First off, we’re going to target our clock and create a function:

const clock = document.getElementById("clock");
function setDate() {
  // Code to set the current time and hand angles.
}
setDate();

Inside of our function we’re going to fetch the current time using the Date() function to calculate the correct angle of the hands:

const now = new Date();
const secondsAngle = now.getSeconds() * 6; 
const minsAngle = now.getMinutes() * 6 + secondsAngle / 60;
const hourAngle = ((now.getHours() % 12) / 12) * 360 + minsAngle / 12;

Here is how this calculation works:

  • Seconds: We take 60 seconds and multiply it by 6, which happens to be 360, the perfect number of angles in a full circle.
  • Minutes: Same as seconds, but now we add the seconds angle and divide it by 60 to increase the angle just a little bit within the minute for a more accurate result.
  • Hours: First, we calculate the remainder of the hour and divide it by 12. Then we divide that remainder by 12 again to get a decimal value we can multiply by 360. For example, when we’re at the 23rd hour, 23 / 12 = remain 11. Divide this by 12 and we get 0.916 which then gets multiplied by 360 for a grand total of 330. Here, we will do the same thing we did with the minutes and add the minutes angle, divided by 12, for a more accurate result.

Now that we have our angles, the only thing left to do is to update the variables of our clock by adding the following at the end of our function:

clock.style.setProperty("--second-hand-degrees", secondsAngle + "deg");
clock.style.setProperty("--minute-hand-degrees", minsAngle + "deg");
clock.style.setProperty("--hour-hand-degrees", hourAngle + "deg");

Last, but not least, we will trigger the function with an interval of a second to get a working clock:

const clock = document.getElementById("clock");
function setDate() {
  // etc.
}
// Tick tick tick
setInterval(setDate, 1000);
setDate();

See the working demo of our basic clock:

Applying this to a conical gradient

OK, so the hands of our clock are working. What we really want is to map them to a conical gradient that updates as the time changes. You may have seen the same effect if you have an Apple Watch with the “Gradient” face active:

Black Apple Watch on a person's wrist showing a deep purple conic gradient face.
Credit: Macworld

To do this, let’s start by updating our .clock element with a conic gradient and two custom properties that control the starting and ending angles :

.clock {
  /* same as before */

  /* conic gradient vars */
  --start: 0deg;
  --end: 0deg;

  /* same as before */

  background: 
    conic-gradient(
      from var(--start),
      rgb(255 255 255) 2deg,
      rgb(0 0 0 / 0.5) var(--end),
      rgb(255 255 255) 2deg,
      rgb(0 0 0 / 0.7)
  );
}

You can play around with this a bit to style it just the way you like it. I added some extra colors in the gradient to my liking, but as long as you have a starting point and an ending point, you’re good to go.

Next up, we will update our setDate() function so that it updates the variables for our starting and ending points on the conic gradient. The starting point will be our seconds hand, which is easy to find because it will be the same as the angle of our minutes. To make this end at the hours hand, we should make our ending point the same as the hourAngle variable in the script, but subtract our starting point from it.

let startPosition = minsAngle;
let endPosition = hourAngle - minsAngle;

Now we can update our variables with JavaScript again:

clock.style.setProperty("--start", startPosition + "deg");
clock.style.setProperty("--end", endPosition + "deg");

It looks like we could be done at this point, but there is a catch! This calculation works fine as long as the minutes hand has a smaller angle than the hours hand. Our conic gradient will get messy the moment when the minutes hand has moved past it. To fix this, we will use a negative value as a starting point. Luckily, it’s easy to spot when this happens. Before updating our variables we’ll add the following:

if (minsAngle > hourAngle) {
  startPosition = minsAngle - 360;
  endPosition = hourAngle - startPosition;
}

By subtracting 360 from our minutes angle, we are able to set a negative value for our startposition variable. Because of this negative starting point, our end position should be updated by the hour angle, subtracted by the starting position.

There we go — now the hour and minute hands are set to gradient angles:

That’s it! But don’t let that stop you from taking this even further. Create your own styles and share them with me in the comments so I can check them out.. Here is a little inspiration to get you going:


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The Many Quirks of JavaScript Dates

JavaScript dates are weird. Famously, Brendan Eich wrote the first version of JavaScript in 10 days - and the Date function itself was no exception. It is based on code that was ultimately deprecated in Java.

That means JavaScript has inherited a Date function which was found to be buggy and problematic in Java, leaving it full of issues. You may have even encountered some problems yourself. You may be wondering, then, "what's so weird about it?". Let's look at all the quirks and common pitfalls with JavaScript's Date constructor so that you can avoid them.

How to Convert a Date String into a Human-Readable Format

I’ll be the first to admit that I’m writing this article, in part, because it’s something I look up often and want to be able to find it next time. Formatting a date string that you get from an API in JavaScript can take many shapes — anything from loading all of Moment.js to have very finite control, or just using a couple of lines to update it. This article is not meant to be comprehensive, but aims to show the most common path of human legibility.

ISO 8601 is an extremely common date format. The “Z” at the end means the time in ISO 8601 format is using the UTC standard, i.e. no timezone. Here’s an example: 2020-05-25T04:00:00Z. When I bring data in from an API, it’s typically in ISO 8601 format.

If I wanted to format the above string in a more readable format, say May 25, 2020, I would do this:

const dateString = '2020-05-14T04:00:00Z'

const formatDate = (dateString) => {
  const options = { year: "numeric", month: "long", day: "numeric" }
  return new Date(dateString).toLocaleDateString(undefined, options)
}

Here’s what I’m doing…

First, I’m passing in options for how I want the output to be formatted. There are many, many other options we could pass in there to format the date in different ways. I’m just showing a fairly common example.

const options = { year: "numeric", month: "long", day: "numeric" }

Next, I’m creating a new Date instance that represents a single moment in time in a platform-independent format.

return new Date(dateString)

Finally, I’m using the .toLocaleDateString() method to apply the formatting options.

return new Date(dateString).toLocaleDateString(undefined, options)

Note that I passed in undefined. Not defining the value in this case means the time will be represented by whatever the default locale is. You can also set it to be a certain area/language. Or, for apps and sites that are internationalized, you can pass in what the user has selected (e.g. 'en-US' for the United States, 'de-DE' for Germany, and so forth). There’s a nice npm package that includes list of more locales and their codes.

Hope that helps you get started! And high fives to future Sarah for not having to look this up again in multiple places. 🤚

The post How to Convert a Date String into a Human-Readable Format appeared first on CSS-Tricks.