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WorldClockTools.

Time, simplified

Outils

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  • Minuteur
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  • DST calendar
  • Cron translator
  • Status-page widget
  • Eclipse calendar
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Popular Cities

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Convertisseurs

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Hubs

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© 2026 WorldClockTools. Tous droits réservés.

Données des villes par GeoNames (CC BY 4.0). Données de fuseaux horaires de la base de données des fuseaux horaires de l'IANA.

  1. WorldClockTools
  2. Cron translator

Cron translator

* translated to English

Paste a 5-field cron expression. Get the plain-English meaning and the next 10 fire times, shown in whichever timezone matters for you.

At 9:00 on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday.

Presets

Next 10 fire times (UTC)
  1. 1Fri Apr 24, 2026 · 09:00UTC
  2. 2Mon Apr 27, 2026 · 09:00UTC
  3. 3Tue Apr 28, 2026 · 09:00UTC
  4. 4Wed Apr 29, 2026 · 09:00UTC
  5. 5Thu Apr 30, 2026 · 09:00UTC
  6. 6Fri May 1, 2026 · 09:00UTC
  7. 7Mon May 4, 2026 · 09:00UTC
  8. 8Tue May 5, 2026 · 09:00UTC
  9. 9Wed May 6, 2026 · 09:00UTC
  10. 10Thu May 7, 2026 · 09:00UTC

Questions

FAQ

Which cron syntax does this support?
Standard 5-field POSIX cron: minute, hour, day-of-month, month, day-of-week. Each field accepts the usual operators — comma lists, hyphen ranges, asterisk wildcards, and slash steps (e.g. */5 or 0-30/10). It does not yet support extended Quartz syntax (seconds field, year field, L/W/# operators).
Why are day-of-month and day-of-week treated specially?
Standard cron has a quirk: when both day-of-month and day-of-week are restricted, the schedule fires on either match, not both. So "0 0 1 * 1" fires on the 1st of every month AND on every Monday — not just Mondays that fall on the 1st. We follow this convention because virtually every cron implementation does.
Does the next-fire-time preview honour DST?
Yes. We resolve each candidate moment in the timezone you select using the IANA rules, so a job scheduled for 02:30 daily in a DST zone will skip the day the clock springs forward (because 02:30 doesn't exist that day) and double-fire the day it falls back, just like real cron daemons that respect TZ.
Why doesn't the description match what I expected?
Plain-English description of cron is a translation, and translations have edge cases. If you see "every minute of every hour" instead of "every minute," it's because both fields use the wildcard. The description is best-effort — the next-fire-times list is the authoritative source of truth for what your job will actually do.

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