* lisp/org.el (org-add-planning-info): Treat absolute time too.

TINYCHANGE
---
 lisp/org.el |    7 +++----
 1 files changed, 3 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-)

diff --git a/lisp/org.el b/lisp/org.el
index fffb0c1..3342b87 100644
--- a/lisp/org.el
+++ b/lisp/org.el
@@ -12078,9 +12078,8 @@ be removed."
                  default-input (and ts (org-get-compact-tod ts))))))
       (when what
        (setq time
-             (if (and (stringp time)
-                      (string-match "^[-+]+[0-9]" time))
-                 ;; This is a relative time, set the proper date
+             (if (stringp time)
+                 ;; This is a string (relative or absolute), set proper date
                  (apply 'encode-time
                         (org-read-date-analyze
                          time default-time (decode-time default-time)))
@@ -14807,7 +14806,7 @@ The prompt will suggest to enter an ISO date, but you 
can also enter anything
 which will at least partially be understood by `parse-time-string'.
 Unrecognized parts of the date will default to the current day, month, year,
 hour and minute.  If this command is called to replace a timestamp at point,
-of to enter the second timestamp of a range, the default time is taken
+or to enter the second timestamp of a range, the default time is taken
 from the existing stamp.  Furthermore, the command prefers the future,
 so if you are giving a date where the year is not given, and the day-month
 combination is already past in the current year, it will assume you
-- 
1.7.3.4



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