Re: Clock tables and two ways to categorize tasks

2020-11-22 Thread Jean Louis
* Marcin Borkowski [2020-11-23 00:28]: > Of course, in an ideal world we'd be paid for the results, not for the > time. But: > > 1. Welcome to the reality, this is not an ideal world. I am being paid > for my time. (And sometimes we really do not have a better option. How > would you calculat

Re: Clock tables and two ways to categorize tasks

2020-11-22 Thread Marcin Borkowski
On 2020-11-22, at 19:16, Jean Louis wrote: > * Kristian Grönberg [2020-11-22 08:56]: >> >> > On 20 Nov 2020, at 10:23, Leo Okawa Ericson >> > wrote: >> > >> >  >> > Some time ago I hacked together a bunch of elisp to create a clock >> > table > > I am sorry what is clock table? > > [snip]

Re: Clock tables and two ways to categorize tasks

2020-11-22 Thread Jean Louis
* Kristian Grönberg [2020-11-22 08:56]: > > > On 20 Nov 2020, at 10:23, Leo Okawa Ericson > > wrote: > > > >  > > Some time ago I hacked together a bunch of elisp to create a clock > > table I am sorry what is clock table? I found only this one: https://tinyurl.com/y2jomwqr Or do you mean

Re: Clock tables and two ways to categorize tasks

2020-11-21 Thread Tim Cross
Kristian Grönberg writes: >> On 20 Nov 2020, at 10:23, Leo Okawa Ericson >> wrote: >> >>  >> Some time ago I hacked together a bunch of elisp to create a clock table >> based on tags. [1] It uses org's dynamic block feature[2] to create a >> piechart with gnuplot and a simple table that show

Re: Clock tables and two ways to categorize tasks

2020-11-21 Thread Kristian Grönberg
> On 20 Nov 2020, at 10:23, Leo Okawa Ericson > wrote: > >  > Some time ago I hacked together a bunch of elisp to create a clock table > based on tags. [1] It uses org's dynamic block feature[2] to create a > piechart with gnuplot and a simple table that shows percentages of time > spent on d

Re: Clock tables and two ways to categorize tasks

2020-11-20 Thread Leo Okawa Ericson
Some time ago I hacked together a bunch of elisp to create a clock table based on tags. [1] It uses org's dynamic block feature[2] to create a piechart with gnuplot and a simple table that shows percentages of time spent on different tags. I should say that it has basically no documentation at al

Re: Clock tables and two ways to categorize tasks

2020-11-19 Thread Bala Ramadurai
Hello, Thank you for the patch from reddit and gist on categorizing tasks in the clocktable. Is there a way, the :formula % will also work on the *Category Time*, that will be really handy in trying to find out category based time clocking? Thanks and have a nice day! Bala https://balaramadurai

Re: Clock tables and two ways to categorize tasks

2020-11-19 Thread Tim Cross
Marcin Borkowski writes: > Hi all, > > here's the problem I'd like to solve. I clock various tasks, and then > generate a clock table. So far, so good. But now I'd like to know > better where my time goes. Most tasks I do have a few similar > components: discussion/research, writing code, t

Re: Clock tables and two ways to categorize tasks

2020-11-19 Thread Mikhail Skorzhisnkii
Hi Marcin, I tried to solve this issue for myself. My first attempt to solve it was to understand which tags are interesting and then make a template with as many tables as there were interesting tag combinations. But then I faced another problem: sometimes I am using different set of tags an

Clock tables and two ways to categorize tasks

2020-11-19 Thread Marcin Borkowski
Hi all, here's the problem I'd like to solve. I clock various tasks, and then generate a clock table. So far, so good. But now I'd like to know better where my time goes. Most tasks I do have a few similar components: discussion/research, writing code, testing, etc. I thought that I could cre