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Hexadecimal time
Base 16 time format proposed in 1863 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Hexadecimal time is the representation of the time of day as a hexadecimal number in the interval [0, 1].
| UTC-00:00 Hex Triplet (Update) | |
|---|---|
| Base 60 | 08:37:23 |
| Base 16 |
5B_FA_B0 |


The day is divided into 1016 (1610) hexadecimal hours, each hour into 10016 (25610) hexadecimal minutes, and each minute into 1016 (1610) hexadecimal seconds.
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History
This time format was proposed by the Swedish-American engineer John W. Nystrom in 1863 as part of his tonal system.[1]
In 1997, the American Mark Vincent Rogers of Intuitor proposed a similar system of hexadecimal time and implemented it in JavaScript as the Hexclock.[2]
Implementation
A day is unity, or 1, and any fraction thereof can be shown with digits to the right of the hexadecimal separator. So the day begins at midnight with .0000 and one hexadecimal second after midnight is .0001. Noon is .8000 (one half), one hexadecimal second before was .7FFF and one hexadecimal second before next midnight will be .FFFF.
Hextime may also be formatted with an underscore separating hexadecimal hours, minutes and seconds; in full mathematical format this follows hex triplet web color scheme.
Conversions
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See also
References
Further reading
External links
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