Contents
To start recording time:
stamp
To stop recording time:
stamp ID DESCRIPTION
where:
for example:
stamp stamper writing documentation
or:
stamp stamper implementing per-month line charts
Imagine you start working on a project, you stamp your start:
stamp
and then you finish a given task, so you stamp it:
stamp stamper writing installation instructions
but then, you keep yourself working on the same project, but on some other task. You don’t have to stamp the start time again, you simply stamp again when you finish the work on that other task:
stamp stamper writing usage instructions
Note
This apply also for changing to another project, you don’t have to stamp the start time again, just keep stamping the end times. In such a situation, Stamper will take the end time of a recorded stamp as the start time of the next one.
Get a list of total times stamped per ID:
stamps
Get the total times stamped for a given ID, for example, stamper:
stamps stamper
Get the total times stamped for the ID stamper during the last week:
stamps stamper 1w
See also
1w is a date-based filter. You can learn more about those filters in the Date-based filtering documentation below.
Get a list of detailed per-day times:
stamps -v
Get details for a given ID, for example, stamper:
stamps -v stamper
Get details for a given month, for example, august 2014:
stamps -v 2014-08-01--2014-09-01
See also
2014-08-01–2014-09-01 is a date-based filter. You can learn more about those filters in the Date-based filtering documentation below.
You can get a timeline of all the stamped stamps:
stamps -t
This timeline will show each stamp in a line, in a similar way to what bebu’s stamp [1] stores in its text-based file:
2014-08-12 12:33 start
2014-08-12 12:51 stamper writing installation instructions
2014-08-12 13:11 stamper writing usage documentation
2014-08-13 09:33 start
2014-08-13 12:12 stamper adding missing tests for the cli tools
You can filter the timeline by ID:
stamps -t stamper
And/or by date:
stamps -t 2m
.. seealso::
*2m* is a date-based filter. You can learn more about those filters
in the :ref:`date_based_filtering` documentation below.
You can generate some nice charts from your stamps. So far only bar charts showing the total time per day can be generated, but you can filter them by ID and/or date. Some examples:
Render a chart of all the times already stamped, by ID:
stamps -g
Render a chart of the stamps for the last 4 days:
stamps -g 4d
Render a chart of the stamps for the ID stamper for the last week:
stamps -g stamper 1w
Note
The charts will be saved into ~/.workstamps-charts, in SVG format. The name of the chart will be generated based on the current date and time, and a symbolic link called chart-latest.svg will be created, pointing to the latest chart generated.
You can get the full list of arguments from the command line:
stamps -h
or:
stamps --help
Most of the results returned by the stamps tool can be filtered using the following date-based filters:
YYYY-MM-DD: Limit the results to only those stamps stamped on this date:
stamps -v 2014-08-13
stamps -t stamper 2014-08-13
YYYY-MM-DD*: Limit the results to only those stamps stamped after this date. For example, this will show per-day details for stamps stamped after the first of august, 2014:
stamps -v 2014-08-01*
*YYYY-MM-DD: Limit the results to only those stamps stamped before this date. For example this will show the total time stamped for project stamper before the first of january, 2014:
stamps stamper *2014-01-01
YYYY-MM-DD–YYYY-MM-DD: Limit the results to only those stamps stamped in a date between those dates. For example, this will show the timeline for july, 2014:
stamps -t 2014-07-01--2014-08-01
nD|W|M|Y: Limit the results to only those stamps stamped since n days (D), weeks (W), months (M) or years (Y) ago. For example, this will show the details for the last month:
stamps -v 1m
Note
It does not matter if you provide d|w|m|y or D|W|M|Y. The filters are handled in a case-insensitive way.
[1] | http://repos.betabug.ch/stamp |