; it's okay to leave lotsa line-breaks (CRLF) between entries, and comments, too, like this line is
; by the way, to create line-breaks inside an entry, insert a UNIX "\n"

Right-click the tray icon!

As well as the transparency dialog (F4) and the scheme preferences (F6), you can set the clock's transparency with the UP and DOWN arrows (1% either way), or the PageUP/PageDOWN keys (10% either way).\n\nUsing the Dialog and HotKey methods immediately saves the new tranparency setting to your current color scheme.

As well as clock's context menu, you can flip through your schemes with F10 (previous scheme) and F11 (next scheme).

Most operations have a HotKey..\n\nF1: Tips & Tricks		F7: Audio Settings\nF2: Resize clock		F8: Access color pickin chooser\nF3: Move clock		F9: Click+drag to move\nF4: Set clock transparency	F10: Previous color scheme\nF5: Alarms & chimes prefs	F11: Next color scheme\nF6: Color scheme prefs

corz clock will let you know about any alarms you might have missed when your computer was switched off or (gasp!) corz clock wasn't running.\n\nYou will be notified of all missed "One Date" and "Custom" alarms, whenever they were, and of "Daily", "Weekday", and "Weekend" alarms if you missed them by less than an hour. If that's not good for you, add the following setting to your corz clock.ini (in this example, two hours)..\n\nmissed_minutes=120

For most preference settings, clicking the label will revert the setting back to the last saved version, and shift-clicking the label will get you back the master default setting; click around.\n\nThe revert button is also your friend.

You may have noticed; when you resize the clock, you can then click+drag to move it somewhere immediately afterwards, even when 'Click+Drag To Move' is disabled (as it probably should be). As moving the clock is usually exactly what you want to do right after resizing, it's *very* handy.\n\nIt lasts for but a single click. As soon you click outside the clock, or click and don't drag, it reverts. Pretty neat.

You can drag wav files onto either of the alert drop-downs (combo boxes) and a new WAV alert will be automatically generated.

All the preset controls (preset dropdown, "x", "revert" & "save" buttons) have a context (right-click) menu, with export controls.\n\nIt's no use having all those lovely drag and drop import facilities without an export facility!

If you delete a preset by mistake (alarms, schemes, or alerts), hold down the SHIFT key, and click the delete button again; the old preset will be restored.\n\nIt's best to do this as soon as possible, before you make any other changes.

You can have more than one alarm set for the same time (for instance, when a "Daily" and "One Date" alarm may overlap), they will all play just fine, in the order they were created.\n\nIf alarms happen to fall on a chime minute, the chime plays first of all.

The settings for numerals, pips and clock hands are also stored inside your individual schemes, so you can create some truly unique clocks, and have them all available via HotKeys (F10 & F11) and context menu.\n\nIt's trivial to create multiple variations of a single basic clock (give it a new name and click "add"), with and without pips, short hands or long, and flip through them live, tweaking, until you get it *just right*.

While it's good that your recent spoken chimes and messages are remembered in their drop-downs, it's also good to know that you can clear these lists by choosing that option from their context (right-click) menus.\n\nNote: you need to right-click the drop-down button itself to get the menu.

