On Fri, Jul 24, 2009 at 2:27 PM, Bernt Hansen<be...@norang.ca> wrote: > Just visit the org file with the task you want to clock in and do C-c > C-x C-i to clock it in. C-c C-x C-o stops the clock (or when you clock > in something else it stops). You can only clock one thing at a time. > Play with it in a test task to see how it works. > > You can clock in from the agenda directly (if it's visible there) with > just I (and O for clock out) > Hi,
thanks, that's working fine :-) > I've documented how I use clocking stuff here: > > http://doc.norang.ca/org-mode.html#Clocking > I already looked into that, but I couldn't find how to track the time of entries without a DATE property. > The agenda is not limited to date ranges. You can find tasks to clock > in via the agenda in lots of ways such as: > > - tags searches (C-c a m) > - org-occur searches by regexp (C-c a /) > - custom agenda view > I tried that, but when searching for matching tasks I can't see their clocked time in this view (when pressing R org tells me that this operation is not allowed in such a buffer). What I just tried was to add a DATE property like this: :DATE: DATE: <2009-07-24 Fri> DATE: <2009-07-20 Thu> :END: With this I can see the task in the agenda and see the clocked time(s), but I have to add an entry every time I'm working on it (and it's redundant because this information is already in the CLOCK property). I haven't used a custom agenda before, is there a way to create one that shows tasks in a timeline by looking at the dates in the CLOCK property? Thanks for your replies, yours too Greg. Geralt. _______________________________________________ Emacs-orgmode mailing list Remember: use `Reply All' to send replies to the list. Emacs-orgmode@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/emacs-orgmode