Christopher Allan Webber <cweb...@dustycloud.org> writes: > Matt Lundin <m...@imapmail.org> writes: > >> There is a special property name for active timestamps: TIMESTAMP. You >> can access the first active timestamp in an entry (either with column >> view or org-entry-get) via the special property TIMESTAMP. Inactive >> timestamps = TIMESTAMP_IA. >> > > Hm, that's interesting. But I'm not talking about a way to access it > via elisp, I'm talking about a place to actually put it in say, the > property drawer. Say: > > ** Pick up bike from the shop > :PROPERTIES: > :OCCURANCE: <2011-04-12 Tue 19:00> > :END: > > etc. > > It's nice to know there's a meta-property for TIMESTAMP, but I'm > specifically looking for a nice place to put that timestamp away. This > is for cleanliness / easy get-set purposes.
O.K. I wasn't clear what you meant by property in the original post. What about :APPOINTMENT:? >> AFAIK, there is no similar built-in function to call on headlines in org >> files. One can, however, navigate to the timestamp and use the >> Shift-arrow keys or C-c . to change the appointment. > > That's useful, and would change this property even if I put it in such a > drawer... provided that property already existed. But what if I want to > insert something on a currently un-OCCURANCE'd (or whatever) thing? I > don't want it to go on the headline, that looks gross. Here's a simple proof of concept: (defun my-org-add-occurrence () (interactive) (org-set-property "OCCURRENCE" (concat "<" (org-read-date t) ">"))) It turns... --8<---------------cut here---------------start------------->8--- * A headline --8<---------------cut here---------------end--------------->8--- ...into... --8<---------------cut here---------------start------------->8--- * A headline :PROPERTIES: :OCCURRENCE: <2011-04-12 20:00> :END: --8<---------------cut here---------------end--------------->8--- > I'm partly trying to see if other people want this as much as I do. > Surely I'm not the only one who finds putting active timestamps on the > headline or scattered just anywhere in the entry kind of gross? I keep them right beneath the headline, which I find to be just the right mix of tidiness and visibility. --8<---------------cut here---------------start------------->8--- * A headline <2011-04-12 20:00> --8<---------------cut here---------------end--------------->8--- Best, Matt