I had the same problem and thought it so glaring that I was surprised
that yours was the only comment about it I could find. It's probably a
reaction to the date parsing being TOO aggressive before. If I did
'7pm -ish dinner', it would remove the '-ish', as well, as well as
many of the character 'flags' I wanted to appear at the beginning to
help catagorize things in SMS alerts.

My workaround is to put the date at the end of the text where the
redundancy doesn't look so silly.
enter 'dinner at 7pm', and it shows up on calendar as '7pm dinner at
7pm'. I can live with that, but I wish someone would document (if it
exists) a way to signal gcal that the start time is NOT part of the
event title.

On Apr 29, 2:36 am, Kleajmp <[email protected]> wrote:
> In the past I could add a new event with a time string before it,
> Google Calender automaticly parses the time as the start time of the
> event:
>
> example:
> 14:00 Grab some food
> resulted in:
> 14:00 Grab some food
>
> since about 2 weeks it like this:
> 14:00 Grab some food
> results in:
> 14:00 14:00 Grab some food
>
> so I always have to modify my events now,
> it takes double time!
>
> Why did this modification happen?

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