mdtimesheet
clj-org-analyzer
Our great sponsors
mdtimesheet | clj-org-analyzer | |
---|---|---|
3 | 6 | |
7 | 274 | |
- | - | |
3.8 | 0.0 | |
5 months ago | over 2 years ago | |
Go | Clojure | |
GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
mdtimesheet
-
Show HN: Time-tracker that helps me with context switches and documentation
Nice one! I made something somewhat related a while back... I still use it.
https://github.com/keyle/mdtimesheet
There is nothing like solving your own problems.
-
.plan
As a side note, I was capturing all my side projects via plan style files,
so I wrote a time tracker for it following a simple format that would calculate roughly how long I spent on each project.
- Show HN: Time tracking with plain text files
clj-org-analyzer
-
The sublime Joy of Emacs / Org Mode
You might find org-analyzer of interest/useful.
-
Getting reports on what I've done
I use https://github.com/rksm/clj-org-analyzer/ to help me build invoices at the end of the month.
-
Wrote a clockreport that groups by day and by project
Have you by chance seen https://github.com/rksm/clj-org-analyzer?
-
How do you get feedback from your systems?
Maybe I'm misunderstanding your question, but have you considered org clocking and then some sort of visualization like org-analyzer? You point it to your files and it'll make a nice chart and overview.
-
Org-clock workflow?
Then there is a really cool application that collects all the data from your org-mode and you dynamically get nice pictures of how do you spend your time (there is filtering by time): https://github.com/rksm/clj-org-analyzer It's amazing.
-
Show HN: Time tracking with plain text files
I use emacs org mode with the built-in time tracking features (org-clock-in). A while ago I built an analyzer for org files that allows to spice and dice how you spent your time: https://github.com/rksm/clj-org-analyzer This has become my daily vehicle for tracking work.
What are some alternatives?
timetrap - Simple command line timetracker
klog - Command line tool for time tracking in a human-readable, plain-text file format.
CCTime - Simple, unobtrusive time tracking utility for Windows
activitywatch - The best free and open-source automated time tracker. Cross-platform, extensible, privacy-focused.
john-carmack-plan-archive - Collection of John Carmack’s .plan files
org-web-tools - View, capture, and archive Web pages in Org-mode
gtimelog - A time tracking application
counsel-org-clock - Counsel (Ivy) interface for org-clock
jmap - JSON Meta Application Protocol Specification (JMAP)
org-ir