"Tim O'Callaghan" <tim.ocallag...@gmail.com> writes: > Hi, > > I've been poking about trying to understand org-date tree, as It is > essentially an undocumented feature at the moment. am i right in my > understanding that it is only meant as a refile-target structure? > > The feature request is to allow the use of ISO week numbers to > structure the year rather than Months. > > so a structure something like: > * 2010 > *** 2010-W35 > ***** 2010-08-30 Monday > ***** 2010-08-31 Tuesday > ***** 2010-09-01 Wednesday > ***** 2010-09-02 Thursday > ***** 2010-08-03 Friday > ***** 2010-08-04 Saturday > ***** 2010-08-05 Sunday > > The week heading is based on the ISO representation, > (http://www.iso.org/iso/date_and_time_format) though i guess some > variant on the ISO week heading might look be better. > > what other use can it be used for? how are other people using it? >
For me its one of the best features since I use org as a journal for pretty much everything. My org-capture-templates entry for my journal creation (also my org-protocol-default-template-key) is ("j" "Journal" entry (file+datetree "journal.org") "* %T %?\n %i\n %a") So bottom line is, I use it for direct filing and not just a refile target. A super feature. The %T meaning of course in my agenda I see the date and time a journal item is added "in place" even if I then reschedule it and refile it at a later date. _______________________________________________ Emacs-orgmode mailing list Please use `Reply All' to send replies to the list. Emacs-orgmode@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/emacs-orgmode