Jamie ran the simulation. The seconds ticked. At 59 seconds, minute flipped. At 23:59:59, the whole display rolled to 00:00:00 without a glitch. It was beautiful—like watching a mechanical watch built from pure logic.
Jamie had spent the last three hours staring at a half-broken counter. The seconds incremented fine, but the minutes rolled over at 60 seconds—only to reset the hour counter randomly at 23, not 24. The dreaded “23:59” would roll to “00:00” perfectly, but “13:59” became “14:00” followed by “00:01” if you blinked. logisim digital clock download
For a moment, Jamie felt guilt. Should I build my own? Then fatigue won. Jamie opened the circuit, traced the connections for ten minutes, understood the trick (a comparator feeding a clear signal only when hours reached 24, not 23), and decided: I’ll rebuild mine using this pattern, not copy it. Jamie ran the simulation
By 5 AM, Jamie’s own clock was running—messier wires, but it worked. And in the final report, under “References,” Jamie wrote: “Inspiration from open-source Logisim clock model. Download link in footnotes.” At 23:59:59, the whole display rolled to 00:00:00
The professor gave an A. And somewhere in the GitHub commit history, “CircuitWizard99” got one more star. Sometimes the best way to learn is to download a working example—not to cheat, but to see what’s possible. Then build your own, better.
Under that, a comment from a user named “CircuitWizard99” read: “Spent 20 hours building mine. Found this. Cried. Works perfectly.”