Thanks for the reply. What you mentioned below is actually the  
behavior that I want to track. As I am able to spend more and more  
time in emacs it helpful to know where I spend my time, be it work  
files, email, documentation etc. That way I can know things like how  
much actual time is spend writing html or javascript for my job or in  
documentation figuring out how to do things in emacs or reading my  
email and adjust my workflow process to be more efficient.

If I were to try to come up with something do you have any  
suggestions? My elisp skills are limited to .emacs configuration and  
most of that is borrowed from the internets. But I like to figure  
things out so I'll take a look at timeclock.el as a starting place.  
Any suggestions for implementing this would be appreciated. Also, is  
there a timeclock help mailing list I should be posting this to  
instead of here?

Thanks again for the reply.
Matthew
On Jul 2, 2008, at 9:44 AM, John Sullivan wrote:

> Matthew Hippely <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
>> Can planner-timeclock be set up to log the time spent visiting a file
>> rather that time spent working on a task?
>>
>
> Not that easily -- it seems like this would be tricky to fully  
> specify.
> Like, what about if you look at help for a command while working on a
> file, or switch to gnus briefly to look at a mail message, or to an  
> ERC
> buffer...? Also I think implementing this wouldn't involve planner at
> all, just timeclock.
>
> -- 
> John Sullivan
> Emacs Planner Maintainer
> http://www.wjsullivan.net/PlannerMode.html
> GPG Key: AE8600B6
>
> _______________________________________________
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> [email protected]
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