hledger_timeclock(5) | hledger User Manuals | hledger_timeclock(5) |
Timeclock - the time logging format of timeclock.el, as read by hledger
hledger can read timeclock files. As with Ledger, these are (a subset of) timeclock.el's format, containing clock-in and clock-out entries as in the example below. The date is a simple date. The time format is HH:MM[:SS][+-ZZZZ]. Seconds and timezone are optional. The timezone, if present, must be four digits and is ignored (currently the time is always interpreted as a local time).
i 2015/03/30 09:00:00 some:account name optional description after two spaces o 2015/03/30 09:20:00 i 2015/03/31 22:21:45 another account o 2015/04/01 02:00:34
hledger treats each clock-in/clock-out pair as a transaction posting some number of hours to an account. Or if the session spans more than one day, it is split into several transactions, one for each day. For the above time log, hledger print generates these journal entries:
$ hledger -f t.timeclock print 2015-03-30 * optional description after two spaces
(some:account name) 0.33h 2015-03-31 * 22:21-23:59
(another account) 1.64h 2015-04-01 * 00:00-02:00
(another account) 2.01h
Here is a sample.timeclock to download and some queries to try:
$ hledger -f sample.timeclock balance # current time balances $ hledger -f sample.timeclock register -p 2009/3 # sessions in march 2009 $ hledger -f sample.timeclock register -p weekly --depth 1 --empty # time summary by week
To generate time logs, ie to clock in and clock out, you could:
Report bugs at http://bugs.hledger.org (or on the #hledger IRC channel or hledger mail list)
Simon Michael <simon@joyful.com> and contributors
Copyright (C) 2007-2019 Simon Michael.
Released under GNU GPL v3 or later.
hledger(1), hledger-ui(1), hledger-web(1), hledger-api(1), hledger_csv(5), hledger_journal(5), hledger_timeclock(5), hledger_timedot(5), ledger(1)
http://hledger.org
June 2020 | hledger 1.18.1 |