Generate Magic Clock Times
List neat clock times with consecutive hour, minute and second. Runs entirely in your browser, so your data never leaves your device.
Output
The result appears here as you type.
How to use Generate Magic Clock Times
- 1. Set how many times to return. Enter How many times you want. Results start from 00:01:02 and continue through every clock time where the hour, minute and second are consecutive digits.
- 2. Choose a separator. Pick a Separator such as a newline or comma to match how you plan to paste the list somewhere else.
- 3. Copy the magic times. Copy the resulting list of consecutive-digit clock times like 01:02:03 and 12:13:14, and use them wherever a memorable time matters.
When to use Generate Magic Clock Times
Generate Magic Clock Times lists every time of day where the hour, minute and second form a consecutive run of digits, like 01:02:03, the kind of clock reading people notice and screenshot. It replaces working out these times by hand.
- Timing an event to land on a memorable clock reading. Someone wants their livestream or ceremony to start at a visually memorable time like 12:13:14. Generate the list of magic times and pick one close to the planned start.
- Explaining why a screenshot's time caught attention. A photo showing a clock at 03:04:05 gets shared because the digits run in sequence. Generate the full list to show how many such moments occur in a day.
- Setting a memorable alarm or reminder time. You want an alarm time that's easy to recall, like 04:05:06, instead of a random number. Generate the list and pick one that fits your schedule.
- Building a demo dataset of visually distinctive times. A clock or timer widget's demo needs a few sample times that look striking in a screenshot. Generate a handful of magic times and use them as the demo values.
Examples
The first magic times
Output
00:01:02 01:02:03 02:03:04
About the Generate Magic Clock Times tool
Generate Magic Clock Times does its work locally, right in the browser. List neat clock times with consecutive hour, minute and second. There is no upload step, no queue and no account, and your data never travels over the network.
It belongs to the Time Tools collection on EditSafely, a set of 90 small, focused Time utilities that share the same instant, private workspace.
You can shape the output with 2 settings, including How many times and Separator, and the result refreshes the moment you change one. A worked example further down the page shows exactly what the tool produces for a real input.
Running locally also makes the tool fast and dependable: results appear as you type or drop a file, there is no server outage that can take it down mid-task, and confidential data can be processed without a second thought.
Frequently asked questions
Does Generate Magic Clock Times cost anything?
Yes, it is completely free. All 2,658 tools on EditSafely work without an account, a subscription or usage limits.
Does the generator send anything to a server?
No data leaves your device. The whole tool is JavaScript that runs inside your browser tab, so there is no upload, no server-side processing and no log of what you did. If you disconnect from the internet after the page loads, it keeps working.
How do I get a different result?
Run the generator again. Each run is computed fresh on your device, and any options you change are applied to the next result immediately.
Do I need to sign up or install anything?
Nothing to install and no account needed. Open the page in any up-to-date browser, including on a phone or tablet, and the tool is ready.
How do I use the result?
The output panel has a one-click copy button, and you can keep refining the input while you work; the result updates in place as you type.