Thats great! I'll give it a try.
You got the right idea, its not the kind of thing you want to always
see. But when you consistently timestamp items, its potentially useful.
Thanks.
On Thu, Apr 10, 2008 at 02:56:59PM +0200, Carsten Dominik wrote:
> Hi Russel, I took another look, and it turned o
Hi Russel, I took another look, and it turned out to be a lot simpler
than I
had thought.
What you can do now (latest git push), in both agenda and timeline:
- press "l" to get CLOCK and CLOSED timestamps listed (this is not new)
- press "[" to get any other entries related to inactive timest
On Mar 21, 2008, at 5:47 PM, Russell Adams wrote:
I routinely use inactive timestamps during long tasks to document when
items occurred. I use inactive timestamps because I don't want to
litter my agenda view during normal use.
However I recently discovered the agenda timeline view, which is a
My interest was only in the logfile mode. I was perusing the source,
and it looks like most of it is abstracted through regexps, except one
hard ref in the agenda code.
I also found the timestamp toggle that I was previously unaware
of. Perhaps I'll just do a global replace if I need to see a file
I am afraid this is going to be hard, the use of active timestamps is
quite strongly hardcoded. I have made a not on my todo list, but I a
not optimistic.
- Carsten
On Mar 21, 2008, at 5:47 PM, Russell Adams wrote:
I routinely use inactive timestamps during long tasks to document when
ite
I routinely use inactive timestamps during long tasks to document when
items occurred. I use inactive timestamps because I don't want to
litter my agenda view during normal use.
However I recently discovered the agenda timeline view, which is a
great way for me to review when things occurred. The