Bclocks
In BCD clocks, the hour tens column usually uses 2 bits (values 1 and 2) because hours only go up to 2. So if the "2" is lit in hour tens, that means 2. Hour units: 5. So hour = 25? No — 25 is impossible. Aha — BCD for time is interpreted as two separate decimal digits: The tens digit (0-2) and units digit (0-9). So if hour tens = 2 and hour units = 5, that means 25 in decimal, which is a valid 24h time (25 = 1 AM next day). But most clocks cap at 23. Thus, for hours 00-23, the tens digit is 0,1,2. When tens=2, units can only be 0-3. So a proper BCD clock would never show hour units=5 with tens=2. So the example 25:26 is actually an invalid display — proving that the reader must understand the constraints.
I love teaching and photography... In that order. I feel that enjoying photography, and photo editing can get WAY too complicated. So my personal mission (and favorite thing to do), is to create education that simplifies the process of taking great photos, and how to edit them to get the results you’ve always wanted.