GTimeLog

A small Gtk+ app for keeping track of your time. Its main goal is to be as unintrusive as possible.
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GTimeLog Ranking & Summary

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  • Rating:
  • License:
  • GPL
  • Price:
  • FREE
  • Publisher Name:
  • Marius Gedminas
  • Publisher web site:
  • http://mg.pov.lt/gtimelog/
  • Operating Systems:
  • Mac OS X
  • File Size:
  • 31 KB

GTimeLog Tags


GTimeLog Description

A small Gtk+ app for keeping track of your time. Its main goal is to be as unintrusive as possible. Here's how it works: every day, when you arrive to work, start up gtimelog and type "arrived". Then start doing some activity (e.g. reading mail, or working on a task). Whenever you stop doing an activity (either when you have finished it, or when you switch to working on something else), type the name of the activity into the gtimelog prompt. Try to use the same text if you make several entries for an activity (history helps here—just use the up and down arrow keys). They key principle here is to name the activity after you've stopped working on it, and not when you've started. Of course you can type the activity name upfront, and just delay pressing the Enter key until you're done.GTimeLog displays all the things you have done today, and will calculate the total time you spent "slacking" and the total time you spent working. It also advises you how much time you still have to work today to get 8 hours of work done.There are two basic views: one shows all the activities in chronological order, with starting and ending times; while another groups all entries with the same into one activity and just shows the total duration.At the end of the day you can send off a daily report by choosing Report -> Daily Report. A mail program (Mutt in a terminal, unless you have changed it in ~/.gtimelog/gtimelogrc) will be started with all the activities listed in it. My Mutt configuration lets me edit the report before sending it.If you make a mistake and type in the wrong activity name, or just forget to enter an activity, don't worry. GTimeLog stores the time log in a simple plain text file ~/.gtimelog/timelog.txt. Every line contains a timestamp and the name of the activity that was finished at the time. All other lines are ignored, so you can add comments if you want to—just make sure no comment begins with a timestamp. You do not have to worry about GTimeLog overwriting your changes—GTimeLog always appends entries at the end of the file, and does not keep the log file open all the time. You do have to worry about overwriting changes made by GTimeLog with your editor—make sure you do not enter any activities in GTimeLog while you have timelog.txt open in a text editor. Requirements: · Python 2.3 or later · PyGtk What's New in This Release: · Show time spent at the office · Closing the main window minimizes GTimeLog to the system tray · Ability to time-offset new log item


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