
The Customize Format dialog box pops up, go to Date tab, clear all text in the box of Short date, and then type the date formats: M/d/yyyy/dddd. The Region dialog box will display, go to Formats tab and click Additional settings.Ħ. The Date and Time Settings dialog box appears, just hit Change calendar settings.ĥ. When Date and Time dialog box comes up, go to Date and Time tab and click Change date and time button.Ĥ. To set the date, time, and time zone for your computer.ģ. Control Panel\All Control Panel Items: select Date and Time Press shortcut + on your keyboard to open Run dialog box, next type the command: control and click OK at the bottom.Ģ. Here in this post, I’d like to give a simple guide of how to show day of week on your computer.ġ. I'll update this post when Windows is done installing its update if that did indeed fix it for me.By default, Windows 10 doesn’t add the day of week (for example, Monday) to the taskbar notification area, but if you can fully customize the time and date format. In fact it's so small and works so well, has so many more options for display and built-in functions, that I just might keep using it instead of the Windows clock. There were options how you preferred each of them, but not a place to select which to show in the system tray.īut in reading this thread I found reference to T-Clock Redux, which you can download here, and that worked perfectly. However the one setting that wasn't anywhere is whether to display the long or short date/time formats.

I don't have "Properties" listed in the context menu, but I do have "Taskbar settings", and from there I could dig to most settings for time/date formats.

But for me right now, there is no way to get it to display under Windows, no matter what I changed. Hopefully when the few updates are completed that will fix it for me too. I was on the Business Model for updates and put them on hold for a week, but changed that to force the current update.
