By :
kernelbd
Published on Thursday, April 13, 2017,11:05:36 in WordPress Plugins
âMy Time Keeperâ :: 3 plugins in 1 bundle
You can add in your every post / page -
Event Countdown
Stop-watch
Convert your page/post to Time & Event Controlled Quiz / Exam / Practice Sheet etc.
Actions:
Stop Watch
Timer Keeper
Event Count Down
Features:
Control Buttons
Floating Control Panel
Hook with Form
On Expire, Click Link/Image
Sound Notification
<iframe style=ââ width=â840â height=â600â src=âhttps://www.youtube.com/embed/-y-_rSZh8AUâ frameborder=â0â allowfullscreen></iframe>
Stop Watch
To enable a stop-watch (which count from Zero (0) to upwards) set stopwatch=â1â. If you enable, Stop-watch then Time-keeper and Event Count-down feature will be disabled.
If you set time=â0â, then Stop-watch will count until you press Pause/Stop button.
If you set time, then it will stop after given time. time can be in these formates â {âhh:mm:ssâ} or {âm:ssâ} or â{seconds}â
If you want to autoplay the stop-watch after page load, set autoplay=â1â
You can set delay time of autoplay in milli-seconds, set autoplay_wait=â1000â
After time-out, you can
hookup with a form by putting the form class-name/id like â hook=â.search-submitâ
perform click event on link/image/form/object by putting the class-name/id â linked=â#click-a-linkâ
redirect the user to a specific URL â redirect=âhttps://www.kernelbd.com/blog/â
You can restrict a user to access the counter by setting attempt parameter. Let say a post-timer can be accessed by a user for 10 times within 48 hours. So do this â attempt=â10â cookie_hour=â48â
Time Keeper
To make a post time keeper (time based reading / quiz / exam / practice sheet etc.), you need to set {stopwatch=â0â}, {when=â0â} and {until=â0â}. Then time will be count in downwards.
You need set value for time, eg,time=â03:15â, then Stop-watch will count until time reaches to 0 seconds. Time formates â {âhh:mm:ssâ} or {âm:ssâ} or â{seconds}â
If you want to autoplay the time-keeper after page load, set autoplay=â1â
You can set delay time of autoplay in milli-seconds, set autoplay_wait=â1000â
After time-out, you can
hookup with a form by putting the form class-name/id like â hook=â.search-submitâ
perform click event on link/image/form/object by putting the class-name/id â linked=â#click-a-linkâ
redirect the user to a specific URL â redirect=âhttps://www.kernelbd.com/blog/â
You can restrict a user to access the counter by setting attempt parameter. Let say a post-timer can be accessed by a user for 10 times within 48 hours. So do this â attempt=â10â cookie_hour=â48â
Event Count Down
Event Count Down can count towards a specific date until and can set future start date by when. To activate Event Count Down, set {stopwatch=â0â} and {time=â0â}
{when=â2017-04-25â} and {until=â2017-05-01 23:59:59â}.
You need set values stopwatch=â0â, time=â0â and set value for when and until. Time formates for both of them are â {âyy-mm-dd HH:mm:ssâ} or {âyy-mm-dd HH:mmâ} or {âyy-mm-ddâ}
If you want to autoplay the time-keeper after page load, set autoplay=â1â
You can set delay time of autoplay in milli-seconds, set autoplay_wait=â1000â
After time-out, you can
hookup with a form by putting the form class-name/id like â hook=â.search-submitâ
perform click event on link/image/form/object by putting the class-name/id â linked=â#click-a-linkâ
redirect the user to a specific URL â redirect=âhttps://www.kernelbd.com/blog/â
You can restrict a user to access the counter by setting attempt parameter. Let say a post-timer can be accessed by a user for 10 times within 48 hours. So do this â attempt=â10â cookie_hour=â48â
Share This Product