timewarrior/doc/data.txt
2016-04-17 12:22:02 -04:00

124 lines
4.4 KiB
Text
Raw Blame History

This file contains ambiguous Unicode characters

This file contains Unicode characters that might be confused with other characters. If you think that this is intentional, you can safely ignore this warning. Use the Escape button to reveal them.

Timewarrior Data
================
Timewarrior has a conceptual timeline, which is a continuum onto which the
inclusions and exclusions are mapped.
An inclusion is a block of time with associated tags, i.e. data captured or
provided by the user representing ongoing work.
An exclusion is also a block of time but represents untrackable time, and acts
as a mask for the inclusions. Here is a visual example:
Inclusion: [-----------------------------------) tag1
Exclusion: [---) lunch
Exclusion [---) dinner
Timeline: ..:...:...:...:...:...:...:...:...:...:...:...:...:...
7 8 9 10 11 12 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
am pm
In the example, there is one incluѕion, a block of time from 8am - 5pm, tagged
with 'tag1'. That was data captured from the command line, perhaps with this
command:
$ timew track 8am - 5pm tag1
There are several ways to track time that result in the same inclusion, for
example, if these commands were run at 8am and 5pm respectively:
[at 8am] $ timew start tag1
[at 5pm] $ timew stop
It can be seen that some combination of all the incluѕions and exclusions will
yield a record of tracked time.
Exclusions
----------
Exclusions are stored as configuration. Whenever an exclusion changes, the set
of all exclusions are written to the data file. This is because all subsequent
inclusions are to be resolved against the most recent set of exclusions. So if
you change from a 9-hour day to an 8-hour day, the tracking remains correct.
Inclusions
----------
Inclusions are captured from the command line in many different ways, but all
results in an incluѕion record being written to the data file.
If there is an open-ended inclusion at the time an exclusion is changed, then
the open-ended inclusion is closed, the exclusions written, and a new open-ended
inclusion is added. Starting a new inclusion closes existing inclusions.
Data Files
==========
The data file is a text file, which grows in length. It begins with a set of
exclusions, followed by a set of inclusion records that utilize the prior set of
exclusions.
An example file looks like this:
exc monday <8:00:00 12:00:00-12:45:00 >17:30:00
exc tuesday <8:00:00 12:00:00-12:45:00 >18:30:00
exc wednesday <8:00:00 12:00:00-13:30:00 >17:30:00
exc thursday <8:00:00 12:00:00-12:45:00 >17:30:00
exc friday <8:00:00 12:00:00-12:45:00 >17:30:00
exc day on 2016-01-01
exc day off 2016-01-02
inc 20160228T080000Z - 20160228T120000Z # Upgrade Planning
inc 20160228T130000Z # Upgrade Presentation "ABCD Inc"
Blank lines are ignored. Here we see a set of exclusions that define a work week
and two inclusions, the first of which represents a four hour block of time with
two tags 'Upgrade' and 'Planning'. The second inclusion is open ended, having
only a start time (1pm), but three tags 'Upgrade', 'Presentation' and 'ABCD
Inc'. The third tag is a quoted string because of the embedded space.
An open-ended inclusion like this means that the tracking continues, but the
exclusions prevent an excess time buildup of the 62½ hours that comprise the
weekend (Friday 5:30pm until Monday 8:00am).
Data File Names
---------------
The data file names will have the year and month numbers, which keeps the data
files small and therefore quicker to manipulate, eliminating the need for any
sophisticated archiving. For example:
~/.timewarrior/data/2016-02.data
~/.timewarrior/data/2016-03.data
To archive old data, simply move any subset of files out of this directory.
Long Inclusions
---------------
If an inclusion spans multiple data files, it is broken into adjacent inclusions
for each data file. For example, with an empty database, an inclusion of:
inc 20160101T000000Z - 20160415T000000Z # tag1
Will be broken into separate inclusions, each in a separate file:
2016-01.data: inc 20160101T000000Z - 20160131T000000Z # tag1
2016-02.data: inc 20160201T000000Z - 20160229T000000Z # tag1
2016-03.data: inc 20160301T000000Z - 20160331T000000Z # tag1
2016-04.data: inc 20160401T000000Z - 20160415T000000Z # tag1
If the database is not empty, then checks for overlapping tags will likely
prevent the above records being written.
Undo Data
---------
The undo stack will be stored as:
~/.timewarrior/undo.data
--- Raw Notes ---
- Recurring inclusions: meetings